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THE TARIFF 


ON 

IMPORTS INTO THE UNITED STATES 

AND THE 

FREE LIST 

AS CONTAINED IN ACT OF 
JULY 24, 1897 


WITH INDEX 


(Reprinted for use of Committee on Ways and Means 
House of Representatives) 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 
1908 






THE TARIFF 


ON 


IMPORTS INTO THE UNITED STATES 


AND THE 


FREE LIST 


f/O 


AS CONTAINED IN ACT OF 
JULY 24, 1897 


WITH INDEX 


(Reprinted for use of Committee on Ways and Means 
House of Representatives) 




WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 
1908 






Treasury Department, 
Document No. 2279. 

Office of Secretary , Division of Customs 


ii. ot D. 


ISOjj 



THE TARIFF 


ON 

IMPORTS INTO THE UNITED STATES 

AND THE 

FREE LIST, 

AS 

V 

CONTAINED IN ACT OF JULY 24, 1897. 






















































































































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SCHEDULES. 


Page. 

A. Chemicals, Oils, and Paints. 7 

B. Earths, Earthenware, and Glassware. 12 

C. Metals, and Manufactures of. 16 

D. Wood, and Manufactures of... 25 

E. Sugar, Molasses, and Manufactures of . 26 

F. Tobacco, and Manufactures of. 26 

G. Agricultural Products and Provisions. 27 

H. Spirits, Wines, and other Beverages . 31 

I. Cotton Manufactures . 33 

J. Flax, Hemp, and Jute, and Manufactures of. 39 

K. Wool and Manufactures of Wool . 41 

L. Silks and Silk Goods . 45 

M. Pulp, Papers, and Books. 47 

N. Sundries. 49 

Free List.• 55 

Reciprocity . 65 

Internal Revenue. 68 


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[Public— No. 11.] 

Au Act To provide revenue for the Government and to encourage 
the industries of the United States. 

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United 
States of America in Congress assembled, Tha t on and after the passage 
of this Act, unless otherwise specially provided for in this Act, there 
shall be levied, collected, and paid upon all articles imported from for¬ 
eign countries, and mentioned in the schedules herein contained, the 
rates of duty which are, by the schedules and paragraphs, respectively 
prescribed, namely: 

Schedule A.—Chemicals, Oils, and Paints. 

1. Acids: Acetic or pyroligneous acid, not exceeding the specific 
gravity of one and forty-seven one-thousandths, three-fourths of one 
cent per pound; exceeding the specific gravity of one and forty-seven 
one thousandths, two cents per pound; boracic acid, five cents per 
pound; chromic acid and lactic acid, three cents per pound; citric 
acid, seven cents per pound; salicylic acid, ten cents per pound; sul¬ 
phuric acid or oil of vitriol not specially provided for in this Act, one- 
fourth of one cent per pound; tannic acid or tannin, fifty cents perpound; 
gallic acid, ten cents,per pound; tartaric acid, seven cents per pound; 
all other acids not specially provided for in this Act, twenty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

2. All alcoholic perfumery, including cologne water and other toilet 
waters and toilet preparations of all kinds, containing alcohol or in the 
preparation of which alcohol is used, and alcoholic compounds not 
specially provided for in this Act, sixty cents per pound and forty-five 
per centum ad valorem. 

3. Alkalies, alkaloids, distilled oils, essential oils, expressed oils, ren¬ 
dered oils, and all combinations of the foregoing, and all chemical com¬ 
pounds and salts not specially provided for in this Act, twenty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

4. Alumina, hydrate of, or refined bauxite, six-tenths of one cent per 
pound; alum, alum cake, patent alum, sulphate of alumina, and alumi¬ 
nous cake, and alum in crystals or ground, one-half of one cent per 
pound. 

5. Ammonia, carbonate of, one and one-half cents per pound; muri¬ 
ate of, or sal ammoniac, three-fourths of one cent per pound; sulphate 
of, three-tenths of one cent per pound. 

6. Argols or crude tartar or wine lees crude, containing not more 
than forty per centum of bitartrate of potash, one cent per pound; con¬ 
taining more than forty per centum of bitartrate of potash, one and 
one half cents per pound; tartars and lees crystals, or partly refined 
argols, containing not more than ninety per centum of bitartrate of 
potash, and tartrate of soda or potassa, or Eochelle salts, four cents per 
pound; containing more than ninety per centum of bitartrate of potash, 
five cents per pound; cream of tartar and patent tartar, six cents per 
pound. 

7. Blacking of all kinds, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

7 


8 


8. Bleaching powder, or chloride of lime, one-fifth of one cent per 
pound. 

9. Blue vitriol or sulphate of copper, one-half of one cent per pound. 

10. Bone char, suitable for use in decolorizing sugars, twenty per 
centum ad valorem. 

11. Borax, five cents per pound; borates of lime or soda, or other 
borate material not otherwise provided for, containing more than thirty- 
six per centum of anhydrous boracic acid, four cents per pound; borates 
of lime or soda, or other borate material not otherwise provided for, 
containing not more than thirty-six per centum of anhydrous boracic 
acid, three cents per pound. 

12. Camphor, refined, six cents per pound. 

13. Chalk (not medicinal nor prepared for toilet purposes) when 
ground, precipitated naturally or artificially, or otherwise prepared, 
whether in the form of cubes, blocks, sticks or disks, or otherwise, 
including tailors’, billiard, red, or French chalk, one cent per pound. 
Manufactures of chalk not specially provided for in this Act, twenty- 
five per centum ad valorem. 

14. Chloroform, t wenty cents per pound. 

15. Coal-tar dyes or colors, not specially provided for in this Act, 
thirty per centum ad valorem; all other products or preparations of 
coal tar, not colors or dyes and not medicinal, not specially provided 
for in this Act, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

16. Cobalt, oxide of, twenty-five cents per pound. 

17. Collodion and all compounds of pyroxylin, whether known as 
celluloid or by any other name, fifty cents per pound; rolled or in 
sheets, unpolished, and not made up into articles, sixty cents per 
pound; if in finished or partly finished articles, add articles of which 
collodion or any compound of pyroxylin is the component material of 
chief value, sixty-five cents per pound and twenty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

18. Coloring for brandy, wine, beer, or other liquors, fifty per centum 
ad valorem. 

19. Copperas or sulphate of iron, one-fourth of one cent per pound. 

20. Drugs, such as barks, beans, berries, balsams, buds, bulbs, bul¬ 
bous roots, excrescences, fruits, flowers, dried fibers, dried insects, 
grains, gums and gum resin, herbs, leaves, lichens, mosses, nuts, nut- 
galls, roots, stems, spices, vegetables, seeds (aromatic, not garden 
seeds), seeds of morbid growth, weeds, and woods used expressly for 
dyeing; any of the foregoing which are drugs and not edible, but which 
are advanced in value or condition byrefining, grinding, or other proc¬ 
ess, and not specially provided for in this Act, one-fourth of one cent 
per pound, and in addition thereto ten per centum ad valorem. 

21 . Ethers: Sulphuric, forty cen ts per pound; spirits of nitrous ether, 
twenty-five cents per pound; fruit ethers, oils, or essences, two dollars 
per pound; ethers of all kinds not specially provided for in this Act, 
one dollar per pound: Provided , That no article of this paragraph 
shall pay a less rate of duty than twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

22. Extracts and decoctions of logwood and other dyewoods, and 
extracts of barks, such as are commonly used for dyeing or tanning, 
not specially provided for in this Act, seven-eighths of one cent per 
pound; extracts of quebracho and of hemlock bark, one-half of one 
cent per pound; extracts of sumac, and of woods other than dyewoods 
not specially provided for in this Act, five eighths of one cent per pound! 

23. Gelatin, glue, isinglass or fish glue, and prepared fish bladders 
or fish sounds, valued at not above ten cents per pound, two and one- 


9 


half cents per pound; valued at above ten cents per pound and not 
above thirty-live cents per pound, twenty five per centum ad valorem; 
valued above thirty-live cents per pound, fifteen cents per pound and 
twenty per centum ad valorem. 

24. Glycerin, crude, not purified, one cent per pound; refined, three 
cents per pound. _ 

25. Indigo, extracts, or pastes of, three-fourths of one cent per 
pound; carmined, ten cents per pound. 

26. Ink and ink powders, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

27. Iodine, resublimed, twenty cents per pound. 

28. Iodoform, one dollar per pound. 

29. Licorice, extracts of, in paste, rolls, or other forms, four and one- 
half cents per pound. 

30. Chicle, ten cents per pound. 

31. Magnesia, carbonate of, medicinal, three cents per pound; cal¬ 
cined, medicinal, seven cents per pound; sulphate of, or Epsom salts, 
one-fifth of one cent per pound. 

Oils: 

32. Alizarin assistant, sulpho-ricinoleic acid, and ricinoleic acid, by 

whatever name known, whether liquid, solid, or in paste, in 
the manufacture of which fifty per centum or more of castor 
oil is used, thirty cents 'per gallon; in the manufacture of 
which less than fifty per centum of castor oil is used, fifteen 
cents per gallon; all other alizarin assistant, not specially nro- 
vided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

33. Castor oil, thirty-five cents per gallon. 

34. Cod-liver oil, fifteen cents per gallon. 

35. Cotton-seed oil, four cents per gallon of seven and one-half pounds 

weight. 

36. Croton oil, twenty cents per pound. 

37. Flaxseed, linseed, and poppy-seed oil, raw, boiled, or oxidized, 

twenty cents per gallon of seven and one-half pounds weight. 

38. Fusel oil, or amylic alcohol, one-fourth of one cent per pound. 

39. Hemp-seed oil and rape seed oil, ten cents per gallon. 

40. Olive oil, not specially provided for in this Act, forty cents per 

gallon; in bottles, jars, tins, or similar packages, fifty cents per 
gallon. 

41. Peppermint oil, fifty cents per pound. 

42. Seal, herring, whale, and other fish oil, not specially provided for 

in this Act, eight cents per gallon. 

43. Opium, crude or unmanufactured, and not adulterated, con¬ 
taining nine per centum and over of morphia, one dollar per pound; 
morphia or morphine, sulphate of, and all alkaloids or salts of opium, 
one dollar per ounce; aqueous extract of opium, for medicinal uses, 
and tincture of, as laudanum, and other liquid preparations of opium, 
not specially provided for in this Act, forty per centum ad valorem; 
opium containing less than nine per centum of morphia, and opium 
prepared for smoking, six dollars per pound; but opium prepared for 
smoking and other preparations of opium deposited in bonded ware¬ 
houses shall not be removed therefrom without payment of duties, and 
such duties shall not be refunded. 

Paints, Colors, and Varnishes: 

44. Baryta, sulphate of, or barytes, including barytes earth, unmanu¬ 

factured, seventy-five cents per ton; manufactured, five dol¬ 
lars and twenty-five cents per ton. 


10 


45. Blues, such as Berlin, Prussian, Chinese, and all others, contain¬ 

ing ferrocyanide of iron, in pulp, dry or ground in or mixed 
with oil or water, eight cents per pound. 

46. Blanc-fixe, or artificial sulphate of barytes, and satin white, or 

artificial sulphate of lime, one half of one cent per pound. 

47. Black, made from bone, ivory, or vegetable substance, by what¬ 

ever name known, including boue black and lampblack, dry 
or ground in oil or water, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 
48 k Chrome yellow, chrome green, and all other chromium colors in 
the manufacture of which lead and bichromate of potash or 
soda are used, in pulp, dry, or ground in or mixed with oil or 
water, four and one-half cents per pound. 

49. Ocher and ochery earths, sienna and sienna earths, and umber 

and umber earths, not specially provided for, when crude or 
not powdered, washed or pulverized, one eighth of one cent 
per pound; if powdered, washed or pulverized, three-eighths 
of one cent per pound; if ground in oil or water, one and one- 
half cents per pound. 

50. Orange mineral, three and three-eighths cents per pound. 

51. Red lead, two and seven-eighths cents per pound. 

52. Ultramarine blue, whether dry, in pulp, or mixed with water, 

and wash blue containing ultramarine, three and three-fourths 
cents per pound. 

53. Varnishes, including so-called gold size or japan, thirty-five per 

centum ad valorem; spirit varnishes, one dollar and thirty- 
two cents per gallon and thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

54. Vermilion red, and other colors containing quicksilver, dry or 

ground in oil or water, ten cents per pound; when not contain¬ 
ing quicksilver but made of lead or containing lead, five cents 
per pound. 

55. White lead, white paint and pigment containing lead, dry or in 

pulp, or ground or mixed with oil, two and seven-eighths cents 
per pound. 

56. Whiting and Paris white, dry, one-fourth of one cent per pound; 

ground in oil, or putty, one cent per pound. 

57. Zinc, oxide of, and white paint or pigment containing zinc, but 

not containing lead, dry, one cent per pound; ground in oil, 
one and three-fourth cents per pound; sulfid of zinc white, or 
white sulphide of zinc, one and one-fourth cents per pound; 
chloride of zinc and sulphate of zinc, one cent per pound. 

58. All paints, colors, pigments, lakes, crayons, smalts and frostings, 

whether crude or dry or mixed, or ground with water or oil or 
with solutions other than oil, not otherwise specially provided for 
in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem ; all paints, colors and 
pigments, commonly known as artists’ paints or colors, whether 
in tu bes, pans, cakes or other for in s, thirty per cen turn ad valorem. 

59. Paris green, and London purple, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

60. Lead: Acetate of, white, three and one-fourth cents per pound; 

brown, gray, or yellow, two and one-fourth cents per pound; 
nitrate of, two and one-half cents per pound; litharge, two 
and three fourth cents per pound. 

61. Phosphorus, eighteen cents per pound. 

Potash : 

62. Bichromate and chromate of, three cents per pound. 

63. Caustic or hydrate of, refined, in sticks or rolls, one cent per 

pound; chlorate of, two and one-half cents per pound. 


11 


64. Hydriodate, iodide, and iodate of, twenty-five cents per pound. 

65. Nitrate of, or saltpeter, refined, one-half cent per pound. 

66. Prussiate of, red, eight cents per pound; yellow, four cents per 

pound; cyanide of potassium, twelve and one-half per centum 
ad valorem. 

Preparations : 

67. Medicinal preparations containing alcohol, or in the preparation 

of which alcohol is used, not specially provided for in this Act, 
fifty-five cents per pound, but in no case shall the same pay 
less than twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

68. Medicinal preparations not containing alcohol or in the prepara¬ 

tion of which alcohol is not used, not specially provided for in 
this Act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; calomel and other 
mercurial medicinal. preparations, thirty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

69. Plasters, healing or curative, of all kinds, and court-plaster, thirty- 

five per centum ad valorem. 

70. Preparations used as applications to the hair, mouth, teeth, or 

skin, such as cosmetics, dentifrices, pastes, pomades, powders, 
and other toilet articles, and articles of perfumery, whether in 
sachets or otherwise, not containing alcohol or in the manufac¬ 
ture of which alcohol is not used, and not specially provided 
for in this Act, fifty per centum ad valorem. 

71. Santonin, and all salts thereof containing eighty per centum or 

over of santonin, one dollar per pound. 

Soap: 

72. Castile soap, one and one-fourth cents per pound; fancy, perfumed, 

and all descriptions of toilet soap, including so-called medicinal 
or medicated soaps, fifteen cents per pound; all other soaps 
not specially provided for in this Act, twenty per centum ad 
valorem. 

Soda: 

73. Bicarbonate of soda, or supercarbonate of soda, or saleratus, and 

•other alkalies containing fifty per centum or more of bicarbon¬ 
ate of soda, three-fourths of one cent per pound. 

74. Bichromate and chromate of soda, two cents per pound. 

75. Crystal carbonate of soda, or concentrated soda crystals, or 

inonohydrate, or sesquicarbonate of soda, three-tenths of one 
cent per pound; chlorate of soda two cents per pound. 

76. Hydrate of, or caustic soda, three-fourths of one cent per pound; 

nitrite of soda, two and one-lialf cents per pound; hypo-sulphite 
and sulphide of soda, one-half of one cent per pound. 

77. Sal soda, or soda crystals, not concentrated, two-tenths of one 

cent per pound. 

78. Soda ash, three-eighths of one cent per pound; arseniateof soda, 

one and one-fourth cents per pound. 

79. Silicate of soda, or other alkaline silicate, one-half of one cent per 

pound. 

80. Sulphate of soda, or salt cake, or niter cake, one dollar and twenty- 

five cents per ton. 

81. Sea moss, ten per centum ad valorem. 

82. Sponges, twenty per centum ad valorem; manufactures of sponges, 
or of which sponge is the component material of chief value, not specially 
provided for in this Act, forty per centum ad valorem. 


12 


83. Strychnia, or strychnine, and all salts thereof, thirty cents per 
ounce. 

84. Sulphur, refined or sublimed, or flowers of, eight dollars per ton. 

85. Sumac, ground, three-tenths of one cent per pound. 

8(j. Yanilliu, eighty cents per ounce. 

Schedule B.— Earths, Earthenware, and Glassware. 

Brick and Tile: 

87. Fire-brick, weighing not more than ten pounds each, not glazed, 

enameled, ornamented, or decorated in any manner, one dollar 
and twenty-five cents per ton; glazed, enameled, ornamented, 
or decorated, forty-five per centum ad valorem; brick, other 
than fire brick, not glazed, enameled, painted, vitrified, orna¬ 
mented, or decorated in,any manner, twenty-five per centum 
ad valorem; if glazed, enameled, painted, vitrified, orna¬ 
mented, or decorated in any manner, forty-five fier centum ad 
valorem. 

88. Tiles, plain unglazed, one color, exceeding two square inches in 

size, four cents per square foot; glazed, encaustic, ceramic 
mosaic, vitrified, semi-vitrified, flint, spar, embossed, enameled, 
ornamental, hand painted, gold decorated, and all other 
earthenware tiles, valued at not exceeding forty cents per 
square foot, eight cents per square foot; exceeding forty cents 
per square foot, ten cents per square foot and twenty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

Cement, Lime, and Plaster : 

89. Roman, Portland, and other hydraulic cement, in barrels, sacks, 

or other packages, eight cents per one hundred pounds, includ¬ 
ing weight of barrel or package; in bulk, seven cents per one 
hundred pounds; other cement, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

90. Lime, five cents per one hundred pounds, including weight of 

barrel or package. 

91. Plaster rock or gypsum, crude, fifty cents per ton; if ground or 

calcined, two dollars and twenty-five cents per toA; pearl 
hardening for paper makers’ use, twenty per centum ad 
valorem. 

92. Pumice stone, wholly or partially manufactured, six dollars per 

ton; unmanufactured, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

Clays or Earths: 

93. Clays or earths, unwrought or unmanufactured, not specially pro¬ 

vided for in this Act, one dollar per ton; wrought or manufac¬ 
tured, not specially provided for in this Act, two dollars per 
ton; china clay or kaolin, two dollars and fifty cents per ton; 
limestone rock asphalt containing not more than fifteen per 
centum of bitumen, fifty cents per ton; asphaltum and bitumen, 
not specially provided for in this Act, crude, if not dried, or 
otherwise advanced in any manner, one dollar and fifty cents 
per ton; if dried or otherwise advanced in any manner, three 
dollars per ton; bauxite, or beauxite, crude, not refined or 
otherwise advanced in condition from its natural state, one 
dollar per ton; fullers’ earth, unwrought and unmanufactured, 
one dollar and fifty cents per ton; wrought or manufactured, 
three dollars per ton. 


13 


Earthenware and China: 

94. Common yellow, brown, or gray earthenware, plain, embossed, or 

salt-glazed common stoneware, and crucibles, all the foregoing 
not decorated in any manner, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; 
Rockingham earthenware not decorated, forty per centum ad 
valorem. 

95. China, porcelain, parian, bisque, earthen, stone, and crockery 

ware, including clock cases with or without movements, plaques, 
ornaments, toys, toy tea sets, charms, vases and statuettes, 
painted, tinted, stained, enameled, printed, gilded, or otherwise 
decorated or ornamented in any manner, sixty per centum ad 
valorem; if plain white and without superadded ornamenta¬ 
tion of any kind, fifty-five x>er centum ad valorem. 

96. All other china, porcelain, parian, bisque, earthen, stone, and 

crockery ware, and manufactures thereof, or of which the 
same is the component material of chief value, by whatever 
name known, not specially provided for in this Act, if painted, 
tinted, stained, enameled, printed, gilded, or otherwise dec¬ 
orated or ornamented in any manner, sixty per centum ad 
valorem; if not ornamented or decorated, fifty-five x>er centum 
ad valorem. 

97. Articles and wares composed wholly or in chief value of earthy 

or mineral substances, or carbon, not specially provided for 
in this Act, if not decorated in any manner, thirty-five per 
centum ad valorem; if decorated, forty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

98. Gas retorts, three dollars each; lava tips for burners, ten cents 

per gross and fifteen per centum ad valorem; carbons for elec¬ 
tric lighting, ninety cents per hundred; filter tubes, forty-five 
per centum ad valorem; porous carbon pots for electric bat¬ 
teries, without metallic connections, twenty per centum ad 
valorem. 

Glass and Glassware: 

99. Plain green or colored, molded or pressed, and flint, lime, or lead 

glass bottles, vials, jars, and covered or uncovered demijohns 
and carboys, any of the foregoing, filled or unfilled, not other¬ 
wise specially provided for, and whether their contents be 
dutiable or free, (except such as contain merchandise subject 
to an ad valorem rate of duty, or to a rate of duty based in 
whole or in x>art ux>on the value thereof, which shall be duti¬ 
able at the rate applicable to their contents) shall pay duty as 
follows: If holding more than one pint, one cent per pound; 
if holding not more than one pint and not less than one- 
fourth of a pint, one and one-half cents per pound; if hold¬ 
ing less than one fourth of a pint, fifty cents per gross: Pro¬ 
vided , That none of the above articles shall pay a less rate of 
duty than forty per centum ad valorem. 

100. Glass bottles, decanters, or other vessels or articles of glass, cut, 

engraved, xminted, colored, stained, silvered, gilded, etched, 
frosted, printed in any manner or otherwise ornamented, dec¬ 
orated, or ground (except such grinding as is necessary for 
fitting stoppers), and any articles of which such glass is the 
component material of chief value, and porcelain, ox>al and 
other blown glassware; all the foregoing, filled or unfilled, and 
whether their contents be dutiable or free, sixty per centum ad 
valorem. 


14 


101. Unpolished, cylinder, crown, and common window glass, not 

exceeding ten by fifteen inches square, one and three-eighths 
cents per pound; above that, and not exceeding sixteen by 
twenty-four inches square, one and seven-eighths cents per 
pound; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty 
inches square, two and three-eighths cents per pound; above 
that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty-six inches square, 
two and seven-eighths cents per pound; above that, and not 
exceeding thirty by forty inches square, three and three-eighths 
cents per pound; above that, and not exceeding forty by sixty 
inches square, three and seven eighths cents per pound; above 
that, four and three-eighths cents per pound: Provided , That 
unpolished cylinder, crown, and common window glass, imported 
in boxes, shall contain fifty square feet, as nearly as sizes will 
permit, and the duty shall be computed thereon according to 
the actual weight of glass. 

102. Cylinder and crown glass, polished, not exceeding sixteen by 

twenty-four inches square, four cents per square foot; above 
that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty inches square, 
six cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding 
twenty-four by sixty inches square, fifteen cents per square 
foot; above that, twenty cents per square foot. 

103. Fluted, rolled, ribbed, or rough plate glass, or the same con¬ 

taining a wire netting within itself, not including crown, 
cylinder, or common window glass, not exceeding sixteen by 
twenty-four inches square, three-fourths of one cent per square 
foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty 
inches square, one and one-fourth cents per square foot; all 
above that, one and three-fourths cents per square foot; and 
all fluted, rolled, ribbed, or rough jdate glass, weighing over 
one hundred pounds per one hundred square feet, shall pay an 
additional duty on the excess at the same rates herein imposed: 
Provided , That all of the above plate glass, when ground, 
smoothed, or otherwise obscured, shall be subject to the same 
rate of duty as cast polished plate glass unsilvered. 

104. Oast polished plate glass, finished or unfinished and unsilvered, 

not exceeding sixteen by twenty-four inches square, eight cents 
per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by 
thirty inches square, ten cents per square foot; above that, and 
not exceeding twenty-four by sixty inches square, twenty-two 
and one-half cents per square foot; all above that, thirty-five 
cents per square foot. 

105. Cast polished plate glass, silvered, cylinder and crown glass, 

silvered, and looking-glass plates, exceeding in size one hun¬ 
dred and forty-four square inches and not exceeding sixteen 
by twenty-four inches square, eleven cents per square foot; 
above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty inches 
square, thirteen cents per square foot; above that, and not 
exceeding twenty-four by sixty inches square, twenty-five cents 
per square foot; all above that, thirty-eight cents per square 
foot. 

106. But no looking-glass plates or plate glass, silvered, when framed, 

shall pay a less rate of duty than that imposed upon similar 
glass of like description not framed, but shall pay in addition 
thereto upon such frames the rate of duty applicable thereto 
when imported separate. 


15 


107. Cast polished plate glass, silvered or unsilvered, and cylinder, 

crown, or common window glass, silvered or unsilvered, when 
bent, ground, obscured, frosted, sanded, enameled, beveled, 
etched, embossed, engraved, flashed, stained, colored, painted, 
or otherwise ornamented or decorated, shall be subject to a 
duty of five per centum ad valorem in addition to the rates 
otherwise chargeable thereon. 

108. Spectacles, eyeglasses, and goggles, and frames for the same, or 

parts thereof, finished or unfinished, valued at not over forty 
cents per dozen, twenty cents per dozen and fifteen per centum 
ad valorem; valued at over forty cents per dozen and not over 
one dollar and fifty cents per dozen, forty-five cents per dozen 
and twenty per centum ad valorem; valued'at over one dollar 
and fifty cents per dozen, fifty per centum ad valorem. 

109. "Lenses of glass or pebble, ground and polished to a spherical, 

cylindrical, or prismatic form, and ground and polished piano 
or coquill glasses, wholly or partly manufactured, with the 
edges unground, forty-five per centum ad valorem; if with 
their edges ground or beveled, ten cents per dozen pairs and 
forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

110. Strips of glass, not more than three inches wide, ground or pol¬ 

ished on one or both sides to a cylindrical or prismatic form, 
and glass slides for magic lanterns, forty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

111. Opera and field glasses, telescopes, microscopes, photographic 

and projecting lenses and optical instruments, and frames or 
mountings for the same; all the foregoing not specially pro¬ 
vided for in this Act, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

112. Stained or painted glass windows, or parts thereof, and all mir¬ 

rors, not exceeding in size one hundred and forty-four square 
inches, with or without frames or cases, and all glass or manu¬ 
factures of glass or paste, or of which glass or paste is the 
component material of chief value, not specially provided for 
in this Act, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

113. Fusible enamel, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Marble and Stone, and Manufactures of : 

114. Marble in block, rough or squared only, sixty-five cents per cubic 

foot; onyx in block, rough or squared, one dollar and fifty cents 
per cubic foot; marble or onyx, sawed or dressed, over two 
inches in thickness, one dollar and ten cents per cubic foot; 
slabs or paving tiles of marble or onyx, containing not less 
than four superficial inches, if not more than one inch in thick¬ 
ness, twelve cents per superficial foot; if more than one inch 
and not more than one and one-half inches in thickness, fifteen 
cents per superficial foot; if more than one and one-half inches 
and not more than two inches in thickness, eighteen cents per 
superficial foot; if rubbed in whole or in part, three cents per 
superficial foot in addition; mosaic cubes of marble, onyx, or 
stone, not exceeding two cubic inches in size, if loose, one cent 
per pound and twenty per centum ad valorem; if attached to 
paper or other material, twenty cents per superficial foot ard 
thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

115. Manufactures of agate, alabaster, chalcedony, chrysolite, coral, 

cornelian, garnet, jasper, jet, malachite, marble, onyx, rock 
crystal, or spar, including clock cases with or without 


16 


movements, not specially provided for in this Act, fifty per 
centum ad valorem. 

Stone— 

116. Burr stones, manufactured or bound up into millstones, fifteen 

per centum ad valorem. 

117. Freestone, granite, sandstone, limestone, and other building or 

monumental stone, except marble and onyx, unmanufactured 
or undressed, not specially provided for in this Act, twelve 
cents per cubic foot. 

118. Freestone, granite, sandstone, limestone, and other building or 

monumental stone, except marble and onyx, not specially pro¬ 
vided for in this Act, hewn, dressed, or polished, fifty per 
centum ad valorem. 

119. Grindstones, finished or unfinished, one dollar and seventy-five 

cents per ton. • 

Slate— 

120. Slates, slate chimney-pieces, mantels, slabs for tables, roofing 

slates, and all other manufactures of slate, not specially pro¬ 
vided for in this Act, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

Schedule 0.—Metals and Manufactures of. 

121. Iron ore, including manganiferous iron ore, and the dross or 
residuum from burnt pyrites, forty cents per ton: Provided , That in 
levying and collecting the duty on iron ore no deduction shall be made 
from the weight of the ore on account of moisture which may be chem¬ 
ically or physically combined therewith; basic slag, ground or unground, 
one dollar per ton. 

122. Iron in pigs, iron kentledge, spiegeleisen, ferro manganese, ferro- 
silicon, wrought and cast scrap iron, and scrap steel, four dollars per 
ton; but nothing shall be deemed scrap iron or scrap steel except waste 
or refuse iron or steel fit only to be remanufactured. 

123. Bar iron, square iron, rolled or hammered, comprising flats not 
less than one inch wide nor less than three-eighths of one inch thick, 
round iron not less than seven-sixteenths of one inch in diameter, six- 
tenths of one cent per pound. 

124. Bound iron, in coils or rods, less than seven-sixteenths of one 
inch in diameter, and bars or shapes of rolled or hammered iron, not 
specially provided for in this Act, eight-tenths of one cent per pound: 
Provided , That all iron in slabs, blooms, loops, or other forms less fin¬ 
ished than iron in bars, and more advanced than pig iron, except cast¬ 
ings, shall be subject to a duty of five-tenths of one cent per pound: 
Provided further , That all iron bars, blooms, billets, or sizes or shapes 
of any kind, in the manufacture of which charcoal is used as fuel, shall 
be subject to a duty of twelve dollars per ton. 

125. Beams, girdfers, joists, angles, channels, car-truck channels, T T, 
columns and posts or parts or sections of columns and posts, deck and 
bulb beams, and building forms, together with all other structural 
shapes of iron or steel, whether plain or punched, or fitted for use, five- 
tenths of one cent per pound. 

126. Boiler or other plate iron or steel, except crucible plate steel and 
saw plates hereinafter provided for, not thinner than number ten wire 
gauge, sheared or unsheared, and skelp iron or steel sheared or rolled 
in grooves, valued at one cent per pound or less, five-tenths ot one cent 
per pound; valued above one cent and not above two cents per pound, 
six-tenths of one cent per pound; valued above two cents and not above 


17 


four cents per pound, one cent per pound; valued at over four cents per 
pound, twenty-five per centum ad valorem: Provided , That all sheets or 
plates of iron or steel thinner than number ten wire gauge shall pay 
duty as iron or steel sheets. 

127. Iron or steel anchors or parts thereof, one and one-half cents 
per pound; forgings of iron or steel, or of combined iron and steel, of 
whatever shape or whatever degree or stage of manufacture, not spe¬ 
cially provided for in this Act, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; anti¬ 
friction ball forgings of iron or steel, or of combined iron and steel, 
forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

128. Hoop, band, or scroll iron or steel, not otherwise provided for in 
this Act, valued at three cents per pound or less, eight inches or less 
in width, and less than three-eighths of one inch thick and not thinner 
than number ten wire gauge, five-tenths of one cent per pound; thin¬ 
ner than number ten wire gauge and not thinner than number twenty 
wire gauge, six-tenths of one cent per pound; thinner than number 
twenty wire gauge, eight-tenths of one cent per pound: Provided , That 
barrel hoops of iron or steel, and hoop or band iron or hoop or band 
steel flared, splayed or punched, with or without buckles or fastenings, 
shall pay one-tenth of one cent per pound more duty than that imposed 
on the hoop or band iron or steel from which they are made; steel bands 
or strips, untempered, suitable for making band saws, three cents per 
pound and twenty per ceutum ad valorem; if tempered, or tempered 
and polished, six cents per pound and twenty per centum ad valorem. 

129. Hoop or band iron, or hoop or band steel, cut to lengths, or 
wholly or partly manufactured into hoops or ties, coated or not coated 
with paint or any other preparation, with or without buckles or fasten¬ 
ings, for baling cotton or any other commodity, five-tenths of one cent 
per pound. 

130. Railway bars, made of iron or steel, and railway bars made in 
part of steel, T rails, and punched iron or steel flat rails, seven-twen¬ 
tieths of one cent per pound; railway fish-plates or splice-bars, made of 
iron or steel, four-tenths of one cent per pound. 

131. Sheets of iron or steel, common or black, of whatever dimen¬ 
sions, and skelp iron or steel, valued at three cents per pound or less, 
thinner than number ten and not thinner than number twenty wire 
gauge, seven-tenths of one cent per pound; thinner than number 
twenty wire gauge and not thinner than number twenty-five wire 
gauge, eight-tenths of one cent per pound; thinner than number 
twenty-five wire gauge and not thinner than number thirty-two wire 
gauge, one and one-tenth cents per pound; thinner than number thirty- 
two wire gauge, one and two-tenths cents per pound; corrugated or 
crimped, one and one-tenth cents per pound: Provided , That all sheets 
of common or black iron or steel not thinner than number ten wire 
gauge shall pay duty as plate iron or plate steel. 

132. All iron or steel sheets or plates, and all hoop, band, or scroll 
iron or steel, excepting what are known commercially as tin plates, 
terne plates, a’id taggers tin, and hereinafter provided for, when gal¬ 
vanized or coated with zinc, spelter, or other metals, or any alloy of 
those metals, shall pay two-tenths of one cent per pound more duty 
than if the same was not so galvanized or coated. 

133. Sheets of iron or steel, polished, planished, or glanced, by what¬ 
ever name designated, two cents per pound: Provided , That plates or 
sheets of iron or steel, by whatever name designated, other than the 
polished, planished, or glanced herein provided for, which have been 
pickled or cleaned by acid, or by any other material or process, or which 

5797—02-2 



18 


are cold-rolled, smoothed only, not polished, shall pay two-tenths of 
one cent per pound more duty than the corresponding gauges of com¬ 
mon or black sheet iron or steel. 

134. Sheets or plates of iron or steel, or taggers iron or steel, coated 
with tin or lead, or with a mixture of which these metals, or either of 
them, is a component part, by the dipping or any other process, and 
commercially known as tin plates, terne plates, and taggers tin, one 
and one-half cents per pound. 

135. Steel ingots, cogged ingots, blooms, and slabs, by whatever proc¬ 
ess made; die blocks or blanks; billets and bars and tapered or bev¬ 
eled bars; mill shafting; pressed, sheared, or stamped shapes; saw 
plates, wholly or partially manufactured; hammer molds or swaged 
steel; gun-barrel molds not in bars; alloys used as substitutes for steel 
in the manufacture of tools; all descriptions and shapes of dry sand, 
loam, or iron-molded steel castings; sheets and plates and steel in all 
forms and shapes not specially provided for in this Act, all of the above 
valued at one cent per pound or less, three-tenths of one cent per pound; 
valued above one cent and not above one and four-tenths cents per 
pound, four-tenths of one cent per pound; valued above one and four- 
tenths cents and not above one and eight-tenths cents per pound, six- 
tenths of one cent per pound; valued above one and eight-tenths cents 
and not above two and two-tenths cents per pound, seven-tenths of one 
cent per pound; valued above two and two-tenths cents and not above 
three cents per pound, nine tenths of one cent per pound; valued above 
three cents per pound and not above four cents per pound, one and 
two-tenths cents per pound; valued above four cents and not above 
seven cents per pound, one and three-tenths cents per pound; valued 
above seven cents and not above ten cents per pound, two cents per 
pound; valued above ten cents and not above thirteen cents per pound, 
two and four-tenths cents per pound; valued above thirteen cents and 
not above sixteen cents per pound, two and eight-tenths cents per 
pound; valued above sixteen cents per pound, four and seven-tenths 
cents per pound. 

Wire; 

136. Wire rods: Rivet, screw, fence, and other iron or steel wire rods, 

whether round, oval, flat, or square, or in any other shape, and 
nail rods, in coils or otherwise, valued at four cents or less per 
pound, four-tenths of one cent per pound; valued over four 
cents per pound, three-fourths of one cent per pound: Provided , 
That all round iron or steel rods smaller than number six wire 
gauge shall be classed and dutiable as wire: Provided further , 
That all iron or steel wire rods which have been tempered or 
treated in any manner or partly manufactured shall pay an 
additional duty of one-half of one cent per pound. 

137. Round iron or steel wire, not smaller than number thirteen wire 

gauge, one and one-fourth cents per pound; smaller than num¬ 
ber thirteen and not smaller than number sixteen wire gauge, 
one and one-half cents per pound; smaller than number sixteen 
wire gauge, two cents per pound: Provided , That all the fore¬ 
going valued at more than four cents per pound shall pay forty 
per cento m ad valorem. Iron or steel or other wire not specially 
provided for in this Act, including such as is commonly known 
as hat wire, or bonnet wire, crinoline wire, corset wire, needle 
wire, piano wire, clock wire, and watch wire, whether flat or 
otherwise, and corset clasps, corset steels and dress steels, and 


19 


sheet steel in strips, twenty-five one-thousandths of an inch 
thick or thinner, any of the foregoing, whether uncovered or 
covered with cotton, silk, metal, dr other material, valued at 
more than four cents per pound, forty-five per centum ad 
valorem: Provided , That articles manufactured from iron, 
steel, brass, or copper wire, shall pay the rate of duty imposed 
upon the wire used in the manufacture of such articles, and in 
addition thereto one and one-fourth cents per pound, except 
that wire rope and wire strand shall pay the maximum rate of 
duty which would be imposed upon any wire used in the 
manufacture thereof, and in addition thereto one cent per 
pound; and on iron or steel wire coated with zinc, tin, or any 
other metal, two-tenths of one cent per pound in addition to 
the rate imposed on the wire from which it is made. 

GENERAL PROVISIONS. 

138. No allowance or reduction of duties for partial loss or damage in 
consequence of rust or of discoloration shall be made upon any descrip¬ 
tion of iron or steel, or upon any article wholly or partly manufactured 
of iron or steel, or upon any manufacture of iron or steel. 

139. All metal produced from iron or its ores, which is cast and mal¬ 
leable, of whatever description or form, without regard to the percentage 
of carbon contained therein, whether produced by cementation, or con¬ 
verted, cast, or made from iron or its ores, by the crucible, Bessemer, 
Clapp-Griffith, pneumatic, Thomas-Gilchrist, basic, Siemens-Martin, or 
open-hearth process, or by the equivalent of either, or by a combination 
of two or more of the processes, or their equivalents, or by any fusion 
or other process which produces from iron or its ores a metal either 
granular or fibrous in structure, which is cast and malleable, excepting 
what is known as malleable-iron castings, shall be classed and denomi¬ 
nated as steel. 

140. No article not specially provided for in this Act, which is wholly 
or partly manufactured from tin plate, terne plate, or the sheet, plate, 
hoop, band, or scroll iron or steel herein provided for, or of which 
such tin plate, terne plate, sheet, plate, hoop, band, or scroll iron or 
steel shall be the material of chief value, shall pay a lower rate of duty 
than that imposed on the tin plate, terne plate, or sheet, plate, hoop, 
band, or scroll iron or steel from which it is made, or of which it shall 
be the component thereof of chief value. 

141. On all iron or steel bars or rods of whatever shape or section 
which are cold rolled, cold drawn, cold hammered, or polished in any 
way in addition to the ordinary process of hot rolling or hammering, 
there shall be paid one fourth of one cent per pound in addition to the 
rates provided in this Act on bars or rods of whatever section or shape 
which are hot rolled; and on all strips, plates, or sheets of iron or steel 
of whatever shape, other than the polished, planished, or glanced sheet- 
iron or sheet-steel hereinbefore provided for, which are cold rolled, cold 
hammered, blued, brightened, tempered, or polished by any process to 
such perfected surface finish or polish better than the grade of cold 
rolled, smoothed only, hereinbefore provided for, there shall be paid 
one cent per pound in addition to the rates provided in this Act upon 
plates, strips, or sheets of iron or steel of common or black finish; and 
on steel circular saw plates there shall be paid one-half of one cent per 
pound in addition to the rate provided in this Act for steel saw plates. 


20 


MANUFACTURES OF IRON AND STEEL. 

142. Anvils of iron or stfeel, or of iron and steel combined, by what¬ 
ever process made, or in whatever stage of manufacture, one and seven- 
eighths cents per pound. 

143. Axles, or parts thereof, axle bars, axle blanks, or forgings for 
axles, whether of iron or steel, without reference to the stage or state 
of manufacture, valued at not more than six cents per pound, one cent 
per pound: Provided , That when iron or steel axles are imported fitted 
in wheels, or parts of wheels, of iron or steel, they shall be dutiable at 
the same rate as the wheels in which they are fitted. 

144. Blacksmiths’ hammers and sledges, track tools, wedges, and 
crowbars, whether of iron or steel, one and one-half cents per pound. 

145. Bolts, with or without threads or nuts, or bolt blanks, and fin¬ 

ished hinges or hinge-blanks, whether of iron or steel, one and one-half 
cents per pound. •» 

146. Card-clothing manufactured from tempered steel wire, forty-five 
cents per square foot; all other, twenty cents per square foot. 

147. Cast-iron pipe of every description, four-tenths of one cent per 
pound. 

148. Cast-iron vessels, plates, stove-plates, andirons, sad-irons, tailors’ 
irons, hatters’ irons, and castiugs of iron, not specially provided for in 
this Act, eight-tenths of one cent per pound. 

149. Castiugs of malleable iron not specially provided for in this Act, 
nine-tenths of one cent per pound. 

150. Cast hollow-ware, coated, glazed, or tinned, two cents per pound. 

151. Chain or chains of all kinds, made of iron or steel, not less than 
three-fourths of one inch in diameter, one and one-eighth cents per 
pound; less than three-fourths of one inch and not less than three- 
eighths of one inch in diameter, one and three-eighths cents per pound; 
less than three-eighths of one inch in diameter and not less than five- 
sixteenths of one inch in diameter, one and seven-eighths cents per 
pound; less than five-sixteenths of one inch in diameter, three cents 
per pound; but no chain or chains of any description shall pay a lower 
rate of duty than forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

152. Lap welded, butt welded, seamed, or jointed iron or steel boiler 
tubes, pipes, flues, or stays, not thinner than number sixteen wire 
gauge, two cents per pound; welded cylindrical furnaces, made from 
plate metal, two and one-half cents per pound; all other iron or steel 
tubes, finished, not specially provided for in this Act, thirty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

Cutlery: 

153. Penknives or pocketknives, clasp knives, pruning knives, and 

budding knives of all kinds, or parts thereof, and erasers or 
manicure knives, or parts thereof, wholly or partly manufac¬ 
tured, valued at not more than forty cents per dozen, forty per 
centum ad valorem; valued at more than forty cents per dozen 
and not exceeding fifty cents per dozen, one cent per piece and 
forty per centum ad valorem; valued at more than fifty cents 
per dozen and not exceeding one dollar and twenty-five cents 
per dozen, five cents per piece and forty per centum ad valorem; 
valued at more than one dollar and twenty-five cents per dozen 
and not exceeding three dollars per dozen, ten cents per piece 
and forty per centum ad valorem; valued at more than three 
dollars per dozen, twenty cents per piece and forty per centum 


21 


ad valorem: Provided, That blades, handles, or other parts of 
either or any of the foregoing articles, imported in any other 
manner than assembled in finished knives or erasers, shall be 
subject to no less rate of duty than herein provided for pen¬ 
knives, pocketknives, clasp knives, pruning knives, manicure 
knives, and erasers valued at more than fifty and not more 
than one dollar and fifty cents per dozen. Razors and razor 
blades, finished or unfinished, valued at less than one dollar 
and fifty cents per dozen, fifty cents per dozen and fifteen per 
centum ad valorem; valued at one dollar and fifty cents per 
dozen and less than three dollars per dozen, one dollar per 
dozen and fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at three dol¬ 
lars per dozen or more, one dollar and seventy-five cents per 
dozen and twenty per centum ad valorem. Scissors and 
shears, and blades for the same, finished or unfinished, valued 
at not more than fifty cents per dozen, fifteen cents per dozen 
and fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at more than fifty 
cents and not more than one dollar and seventy-five cents per 
dozen, fifty cents per dozen and fifteen per centum ad valorem; 
valued at more than one dollar and seventy-five cents per 
dozen, seventy-five cents per dozen and twenty-five per centum 
ad valorem. 

154. Swords, sword-blades, and side-arms, thirty-five per centum ad 

valorem. 

155. Table, butchers’, carving, cooks’, hunting, kitchen, bread, but¬ 

ter, vegetable, fruit, cheese, plumbers’, painters’, palette, 
artists’, and shoe knives, forks and steels, finished or unfin¬ 
ished, with handles of mother-of-pearl, shell or ivory, sixteen 
cents each; with handles of deer horn, twelve cents each; with 
handles of hard rubber, solid bone, celluloid or any pyroxyline 
material, five cents each; with handles of any other material 
than those above mentioned, one and one-half cents each, and 
in addition, on all the above articles, fifteen per centum ad 
valorem: Provided , That none of the above-named articles 
shall pay a less rate of duty than forty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

156. Files, file-blanks, rasps, and floats, of all cuts and kinds, two and 
one-half inches in length and under, thirty cents per dozen; over two 
and one-half inches in length and not over four and one-lialf inches, 
fifty cents per dozen; over four and one-half inches in length and under 
seven inches, seventy-five cents per dozen; seven inches in length and 
over, one dollar per dozen. 

Firearms : 

157. Muskets, muzzle-loading shotguns, rifles, and parts thereof, 

twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

158. Double-barreled, sporting, breech-loading shotguns, combination 

shotguns and rifles, valued at not more than five dollars, one 
dollar and fifty cents each and in addition thereto fifteen per 
centum ad valorem; valued at more than five dollars and not 
more than ten dollars, four dollars each and in addition thereto 
fifteen per centum ad valorem each; valued at more than ten dol¬ 
lars, six dollars each; double barrels for sporting breech-loading 
shotguns and rifles further advanced in manufacture than rough 
bored only, three dollars each; stocks for double-barreled sport¬ 
ing breech-loading shotguns and rifles wholly or partially manu- 


22 


factured, three dollars each; and in addition thereto on all 
such guns and rifles, valued at more than ten dollars each, and 
on such stocks and barrels, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; 
on all other parts of such guns or rifles, and fittings for such 
stocks or barrels, finished or unfinished, fifty per centum ad 
valorem: Provided , That all double-barrel sporting breech¬ 
loading shotguns and rifles imported without a lock or locks or 
other fittings shall be subject to a duty of six dollars each and 
thirty-five per centum ad valorem; single-barreled breecli- 
loading shotguns, or parts thereof, except as otherwise spe¬ 
cially provided for in this Act, one dollar each and thirty-five 
per centum ad valorem. Revolving pistols or parts thereof, 
seventy-five cents each and twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

159. Sheets, plates, wares, or articles of iron, steel, or other metal, 
enameled or glazed with vitreous glasses, forty per centum ad valorem. 

Kails, Spikes, Tacks, and Needles: 

160. Cut nails and cut spikes of iron or steel, six-tenths of one cent 

per pound. 

161. Horseshoe* nails, hob nails, and all other wrought iron or steel 

nails not specially provided for in this Act, two and one-fourth 
cents per pound. 

162. Wire nails made of wrought iron or steel, not less than one inch 

in length and not lighter than number sixteen wire gauge, one- 
half of one cent per pound; less than one inch in length and 
lighter than number sixteen wire gauge, one cent per pound. 

163. Spikes, nuts, and washers, and horse, mule, or ox shoes, of 

wrought iron or steel, one cent per pound. 

164. Cut tacks, brads, or sprigs, not exceeding sixteen ounces to the 

thousand, one and one-fourth cents per thousand; exceeding 
sixteen ounces to the thousand, one and one-half cents per 
pound. 

165. Needles for knitting or sewing machines, including latch needles, 

one dollar per thousand and twenty-five per centum ad valorem; 
crochet needles and tape needles, knitting and all other needles, 
not specially provided for in this Act, and bodkins of metal, 
twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Plates : 

166. Steel plates engraved, stereotype plates, electrotype plates, and 

plates of other materials, engraved or lithographed, for print¬ 
ing, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

167. Rivets of iron or steel, two cents per pound. 

Saws : 

168. Crosscut saws, six cents per linear foot; mill saws, ten cents 

per linear foot; pit, and drag saws, eight cents per linear foot; 
circular saws, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; steel band 
saws, finished or further advanced than tempered and polished, 
ten cents per pound and twenty'per centum ad valorem; hand, 
back, and all other saws, not specially provided for in this Act, 
thirty per centum ad valorem. 

169. Screws, commonly called wood screws, made of iron or steel, 
more than two inches in length, four cents per pound; over one inch 
and not more than two inches in length, six cents per pound; over 
one-half inch and not more than one inch in length, eight and one-half 
cents per pound; one-half inch and less in length, twelve cents per 
pound. 


23 


170. Umbrella and parasol ribs and stretchers, composed in chief value 
of iron, steel, or other metal, in frames or otherwise, fifty per centum 
ad valorem. 

171. Wheels for railway purposes, or parts thereof, made of iron or 
steel, and steel-tired wheels for railway purposes, whether wholly or 
partly finished, and iron or steel locomotive, car, or other railway tires 
or parts thereof, wholly or partly manufactured, one and one-half cents 
per pound; and ingots, cogged ingots, blooms, or blanks for the same, 
without regard to the degree of manufacture, one and one-fourth cents 
per pound: Provided , That when wheels for railway purposes, or parts 
thereof, of iron or steel, are imported with iron or steel axles fitted in 
them, the wheels and axles together shall be dutiable at the same rate 
as is provided for the wheels when imported separately. 

MISCELLANEOUS METALS AND MANUFACTURES OF. 

172. Aluminum, and alloys of any kind in which aluminum is the 
component material of chief value, in crude form, eight cents per 
pound; in plates, sheets, bars, and rods, thirteen cents per pound. 

173. Antimony, as regulus or metal, three-fourths of one cent per 
pound. 

174. Argentine, albata, or German silver, unmanufactured, twenty- 
five per centum ad valorem. 

175. Bronze powder, twelve cents per pound; bronze or Dutch-metal 
or aluminum, in leaf, six cents per package of one hundred leaves. 

176. Copper in rolled plates, called braziers’ copper, sheets, rods, 
pipes, and copper bottoms, two and one-half cents per pound; sheath¬ 
ing or yellow metal of which copper is the component material of chief 
value, and not composed Wholly or in part of iron ungalvanized, two 
cents per pound. 

Gold and Silver: 

177. Gold leaf, one dollar and seventy-five cents per package of five 

hundred leaves. 

178. Silver leaf, seventy-five cents per package of five hundred leaves. 

179. Tinsel wire, lame or lahn, made wholly or in chief value of gold, 

silver, or other metal, five cents per pound: bullions and metal 
threads, made wholly or in chief value of tinsel wire, lame or 
lahn, five cents per pound and thirty-five per centum ad 
valorem; laces, embroideries, braids, galloons, trimmings, or 
other articles, made wholly or in chief value of tinsel wire, lame 
or lahn, bullions, or metal threads, sixty per centum ad valorem. 

180. Hooks and eyes, metallic, whether loose, carded or otherwise, 
including weight of cards, cartons, and immediate wrappings and labels, 
five and one-half cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

Lead : 

181. Lead-bearing ore of all kinds, one and one-half cents per pound 

on the lead contained therein: Provided , That on all importa¬ 
tions of lead-bearing ores the duties shall be estimated at the 
port of entry, and a bond given in double the amount of such 
estimated duties ior the transportation of the ores by common 
carriers bonded for the transportation of appraised or unap¬ 
praised merchandise to properly equipped sampling or smelt¬ 
ing establishments, whether designated as bonded warehouses 
or otherwise. On the arrival of the ores at such establishments 


24 


they shall be sampled according to commercial methods under 
the supervision of Government officers, who shall be stationed 
at such establishments, and who shall submit the samples thus 
obtained to a Government assayer, designated by the Secre¬ 
tary of the Treasury, who shall make a proper assay of the 
sample, and report the result to the proper customs officers, 
and the import entries shall be liquidated thereon, except in 
case of ores that shall be removed to a bonded warehouse to be 
refined for exportation as provided by law. And the Secre¬ 
tary of the Treasury is authorized to make all necessary regu¬ 
lations to enforce the provisions of this paragraph. 

182. Lead dross, lead bullion or base bullion, lead in pigs and bars, 

lead in any form not specially provided for in this Act, old 
refuse lead run into blocks and bars, and old scrap lead fit only 
to be remanufactured; all the foregoing, two and one-eighth 
cents per pound; lead in sheets, pipe, shot, glaziers’ lead and 
lead wire, two and one-half cents per pound. 

183. Metallic mineral substances in a crude state, and metals 
unwrought, not specially provided for in this Act, twenty per centum 
ad valorem; monazite sand and thorite, six cents per pound. 

184. Mica, unmanufactured, or rough trimmed only, six cents per 
pound and twenty per centum ad valorem; mica, cut or trimmed, twelve 
cents per pound and twenty per centum ad valorem. 

185. Nickel, nickel oxide, alloy of any kind in which nickel is a com¬ 
ponent material of chief value, in pigs, ingots, bars, or sheets, six cents 
per pound. 

186. Pens, metallic, except gold pens, twelve cents per gross. 

187. Penholder tips, penholders or parts thereof, and gold pens, 
twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

188. Pins with solid heads, without ornamentation, including hair, 
safety, hat, bonnet, and shawl pins; any of the foregoing composed 
wholly of brass, copper, iron, steel, or other base metal, not plated, and 
not commonly known as jewelry, thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

189. Quicksilver, seven cents per pound. The flasks, bottles, or other 
vessels in which quicksilver is imported shall be subject to the same 
rate of duty as they would be subjected to if imported empty. 

190. Type metal, one and one-half cents per pound for the lead con¬ 
tained therein; new types, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

191. Watch movements, whether imported in cases or not, if having 
not more than seven jewels, thirty-five cents each; if having more than 
seven jewels and not more than eleven jewels, fifty cents each ; if hav¬ 
ing more than eleven jewels and not more than fifteen jewels, seventy- 
five cents each; if having more than fifteen jewels and not more than 
seventeen jewels, one dollar and twenty-five cents each; it having more 
than seventeen jewels, three dollars each, and in addition thereto, on 
all the foregoing, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; watch cases and 
parts of watches, including watch dials, chronometers, box or ship, and 
parts thereof, clocks and parts thereof, not otherwise provided for in 
this Act, whether separately packed or otherwise, not composed wholly 
or in part of china, porcelain, parian, bisque or earthenware, forty per 
centum ad valorem; all jewels for use in the manufacture of watches or 
clocks, ten per centum ad valorem. 

192. Zinc in blocks or pigs, one and one-half cents per pound; in 
sheets, two cents per pound; old and worn-out, fit only to be remanu¬ 
factured, one cent per pound. 

193. Articles or wares not specially provided for in this Act, composed 


25 


wholly or in part of iron, steel, lead, copper, nickel, pewter, zinc, gold, sil¬ 
ver, platinum, aluminum or other metal, and whether partly or wholly 
manufactured, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Schedule D.—Wood and Manufactures of. 

194. Timber hewn, sided, or squared (not less than eight inches 
square), and round timber used for spars or in building wharves, one 
cent per cubic foot. 

195. Sawed boards, planks, deals, and other lumber of whitewood 
sycamore, and basswood, one dollar per thousand feet board measure; 
sawed lumber, not specially provided for in this Act, two dollars per 
thousand feet board measure; but when lumber of any sort is planed 
or finished, in addition to the rates herein provided, there shall be 
levied and paid for each side so planed or finished fifty cents per thou¬ 
sand feet board measure; and if planed on one side and tongued and 
grooved, one dollar per thousand feet board measure; and it planed on 
two sides and tongued and grooved, one dollar and fifty cents per 
thousand feet board measure; and in estimating board measure under 
this schedule no deduction shall be made on board measure on account 
of planing, tongueing and grooving: Provided , That if any country or 
dependency shall impose an export duty upon saw logs,round unmanu¬ 
factured timber, stave bolts, shingle bolts, or heading bolts, exported to 
the United States, or a discriminating charge upon boom sticks, or 
chains used by American citizens in towing logs, the amount of such 
export duty, tax, or other charge, as the case may be, shall be added as 
an additional duty to the duties imposed upon the articles mentioned 
in this paragraph when imported from such country or dependency. 

19G. Paving posts, railroad ties, and telephone, trolley, electric-light 
and telegraph poles of cedar or other woods, twenty per centum ad 
valorem. 

197. Kindling wood in bundles not exceeding one-quarter of a cubic 
foot each, three-tenths of one cent per bundle; if in larger bundles, 
three-tenths of one cent for each additional quarter of a cubic foot or 
fractional part thereof. 

198. Sawed boards, planks, deals, and all forms of sawed cedar, 
lignum-vitae, lancewood, ebony, box, granadilla, mahogany, rosewood, 
satinwood, and all other cabinet woods not further manufactured than 
sawed, fifteen per centum ad valorem; veneers of wood, and wood, 
unmanufactured, not specially provided for in this Act, twenty per 
centum ad valorem. 

199. Clapboards, one dollar and fifty cents per thousand. - 

200. Hubs for wheels, posts, heading bolts, stave bolts, last-blocks, 
wagon blocks, oar-blocks, heading-blocks, and all like blocks or sticks, 
rough-hewn, sawed or bored, twenty per centum ad valorem; fence 
posts, ten per centum ad valorem. 

201. Laths, twenty-five cents per one thousand pieces. 

202. Pickets, palings and staves of wood, of all lands, ten per centum 
ad valorem. 

203. Sh'ingles, thirty cents per thousand. 

204. Casks, barrels, and hogsheads, (empty), sugar-box sliooks, and 
packing-boxes (empty), and packing-box shooks, of wood, not specially 
provided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

205. Boxes, barrels, or other articles containing oranges, lemons, 
limes, grape fruit, shaddocks or pomelos, thirty per centum ad valorem: 
Provided , That the thin wood, so called, comprising the sides, tops and 


26 


bottoms of orange and lemon boxes of the growth and manufacture 
of the United States, exported as orange and lemon box sliooks, may 
be reimported in completed form, filled with oranges and lemons, by 
the payment of duty at one-half the rate imposed on similar boxes of 
entirely foreign growth and manufacture. 

206. Chair cane or reeds, wrought or manufactured from rattans or 
reeds, ten per centum ad valorem ; osier or willow prepared for basket 
makers’ use, twenty per centum ad valorem; manufactures of osier or 
willow, forty per centum ad valorem. 

207. Toothpicks of wood or other vegetable substance, two cents per 
one thousand and fifteen per centum ad valorem; butchers’ and pack¬ 
ers’ skewers of wood, forty cents per thousand. 

208. House or cabinet furniture, of wood, wholly or partly finished, 
and manufactures of wood, or of which wood is the component material 
of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, thirty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

Schedule E.—Sugar, Molasses, and Manufactures of. 

209. Sugars not above number sixteen Hutch standard in color, tank 
bottoms, sirups of cane juice, melada, concentrated melada, concrete 
and concentrated molasses, testing by the polariscope not above seventy- 
live degrees, ninety-five one-hundredths of one cent per pound, and for 
every additional degree shown by the polariscopic test, thirty-five one- 
thousandths of one cent per pound additional, and fractions of a degree 
in proportion; and on sugar above number sixteen Dutch standard in 
color, and on all sugar which has gone through a process of refining, 
one cent and ninety-five one-hundredths of one-cent per pound; molasses 
testing above forty degrees and not above fifty-six degrees, three cents 
per gallon; testing filty-six degrees and above, six cents per gallon; 
sugar draiuings and sugar sweepings shall be subject to duty as molas¬ 
ses or sugar, as the case may be, according to polariscopic test: Pro¬ 
vided , That nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to abro¬ 
gate or in any manner impair or alfect the provisions of the treaty of 
commercial reciprocity concluded between the United States and the 
King of the Hawaiian Islands on the thirtieth day of January, eighteen 
hundred and seventy-five, or the provisions of any Act of Congress 
heretofore passed for the execution of the same. 

210. Maple sugar and maple sirup, four cents per pound; glucose or 
grape sugar, one and one-half cents per pound; sugar cane in its natu 
ral state, or unmanufactured, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

211. Saccharine, one dollar and fifty cents per pound and ten per 
centum ad valorem. 

212. Sugar candy and all confectionery not specially provided for in 
this Act, valued at fifteen cents per pound or less, and on sugars after 
being refined, when tinctured, colored or in any way adulterated, four 
cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at more 
than fifteen cents per pound, fifty per centum ad valorem. The weight 
and the value of the immediate coverings, other than the outer packing 
case or other covering, shall be included in the dutiable weight and the 
value of the merchandise. 

Schedule F.—Tobacco and Manufactures of. 

213. Wrapper tobacco, and filler tobacco when mixed or packed with 
more than fifteen per centum of wrapper tobacco, and all leaf tobacco 


27 


the product of two or more countries or dependencies when mixed or 
packed together, if unstemmed, one dollar and eighty-five cents per 
pound; if stemmed, two dollars and fifty cents per pound; filler tobacco 
not specially provided for in this Act, if unstemmed, thirty-five cents 
per pound; if stemmed, fifty cents per pound. 

214. The term wrapper tobacco as used in this Act means that quality 
of leaf tobacco which is suitable for cigar wrappers, and the term filler 
tobacco means all other leaf tobacco. Collectors of customs shall not 
permit entry to be made, except under regulations to be prescribed by 
the Secretary of the Treasury, of any leaf tobacco, unless the invoices of 
the same shall specify in detail the character of such tobacco, whether 
wrapper or filler, its origin and quality. In the examination for classi¬ 
fication of any imported leaf tobacco, at least one bale, box, or package 
in every ten, and at least one in every invoice, shall be examined by the 
appraiser or person authorized by law to make such examination, and 
at least ten hands shall be examined in each examined bale, box, or 
package. 

215. All other tobacco, manufactured or unmanufactured, not spe¬ 
cially provided for in this Act, fifty-five cents per pound. 

216. Snuff and snuff flour, manufactured of tobacco, ground dry, or 
damp, and pickled, scented, or otherwise, of all descriptions, fifty-five 
cents per pound. 

217. Cigars, cigarettes, cheroots of all kinds, four dollars and fifty 
cents per pound and twenty-five per centum ad valorem; and paper 
cigars and cigarettes, including wrappers, shall be subject to the same 
duties as are herein imposed upon cigars. 

Schedule G.—Agricultural Products and Provisions. 
Animals, Live : 

218. Cattle, if less than one year old, two dollars per head; all other 

cattle if valued at not more than fourteen dollars per head, 
three dollars and seventy-five cents per head; if valued at 
more than fourteen dollars per head, twenty-seven and one- 
half per centum ad valorem. 

219. Swine, one dollar and fifty cents per head. 

220. Horses and mules, valued at one hundred and fifty dollars or 

less per head, thirty dollars per head; if valued at over one 
hundred and fifty dollars, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

221. Sheep, one year old or over, one dollar and fifty cents per head; 

less than one year old, seventy-five cents per head. 

222. All other live animals, not specially provided for in this Act, 

twenty per centum ad valorem. 

Breadstuffs and Farinaceous Substances: 

223. Barley, thirty cents per bushel of forty-eight pounds. 

224. Barley-malt, forty-five cents per bushel of thirty-four pounds. 

225. Barley, pearled, patent, or hulled, two cents per pound. 

226. Buckwheat, fifteen cents per bushel of forty-eight pounds. 

227. Corn or maize, fifteen cents per bushel of fifty-six pounds. 

228. Corn meal, twenty cents per bushel of forty-eight pounds. 

229. Macaroni, vermicelli, and all similar preparations, one and one- 

half cents per pound. 

230. Oats, fifteen cents per bushel. 

231. Oatmeal and rolled oats, one cent per pound; oat hulls, ten cents 

per hundred pounds. 


232. Rice, cleaned, two cents per pound; uncleaned rice, or rice free 

of the outer hull and still having the inner cuticle on, one and 
one-fourth cents per pound; rice flour, and rice meal, and rice 
broken which will pass through a sieve known commercially 
as number twelve wire sieve, one-fourth of one cent per pound; 
paddy, or rice having the outer hull on, three-fourths of one 
cent per pound. 

233. Rye, ten cents per bushel; rye flour, one-half of one cent per 

ound. 



234. Wheat, twenty-five cents per bushel. 

235. Wheat flour, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Dairy Products: 

23G. Butter, and substitutes therefor, six cents per pound. 

237. Cheese, and substitutes therefor, six cents per pound. 

238. Milk, fresh, two cents per gallon. 

239. Milk, preserved or condensed, or sterilized by heating or other 

processes, including weight of immediate coverings, two cents 
per pound; sugar of milk, five cents per pound. 

Farm and Field Products : 

240. Beans, forty-five cents per bushel of sixty pounds. 

241. Beans, pease, and mushrooms, prepared or preserved, in tins, 

jars, bottles, or similar packages, two and one-half cents per 
pound, including the weight of all tins, jars, and other imme¬ 
diate coverings; all vegetables, prepared or preserved, including 
pickles and sauces of all kinds, not specially provided for in 
this Act, and fish paste or sauce, forty per centum ad valorem. 

242. Cabbages, three cents each. 

243. Cider, five cents per gallon. 

244. Eggs, not specially provided for in this Act, five cents per dozen. 

245. Eggs, yolk of, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; albumen, 

egg or blood, three cents per pound; dried blood, when soluble, 
one and one-lialf cents per pound. 

246. Hay, four dollars per ton. 

247. Honey, twenty cents per gallon. 

248. Hops, twelve cents per pound; hop extract and lupulin, fifty 

per centum ad valorem. 

249. Onions, forty cents per bushel; garlic, one cent per pound. 

250. Pease, green, in bulk or in barrels, sacks, or similar packages, 

and sevd pease, forty cents per bushel of sixty pounds; pease, 
dried, not specially provided for, thirty cents per bushel; split 
pease, forty cents per bushel of sixty pounds; pease in car¬ 
tons, papers, or other small packages, one cent per pound. 

251. Orchids, palms, dracmnas, crotons and azaleas, tulips, hya¬ 

cinths, narcissi, jonquils, lilies, lilies of the valley, and all 
other bulbs, bulbous roots, or corms, which are cultivated for 
their flo ers, and natural flowers of all kinds, preserved or 
fresh, suitable for decorative purposes, twenty-five per centum 
ad valorem. 

252. Stocks, cuttings or seedlings of Myrobolan plum, Mahaleb or 

Mazzard cherry, three years old or less, fifty cents per thou¬ 
sand plants and fifteen per centum ad valorem; stocks, cut¬ 
tings or seedlings of pear, apple, quince and the St. Julien 
plum, three years old or less, and evergreen seedlings, one 
dollar per thousand plants and fifteen per centum ad valorem; 


29 


rose plants, budded, grafted, or grown on their own roots, two 
and one half cents each; stocks, cuttings and seedlings of all 
fruit and ornamental trees, deciduous and evergreen, shrubs 
and vines, manetti, inultiflora, and brier rose, and all trees, 
shrubs, plants and vines, commonly known as nursery or 
greenhouse stock, not specially provided for in this Act, 
twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

253. Potatoes, twenty-five cents per bushel of sixty pounds. 

254. Seeds: Castor beans or seeds, twenty-five cents per bushel of 

fifty pounds; flaxseed or linseed and other oil seeds not spe¬ 
cially provided for in this Act, twenty-five cents per bushel of 
fifty six pounds; poppyseed, fifteen cents per bushel; but no 
drawback shall be allowed upon oil cake made from imported 
seed, nor shall any allowance be made for dirt or other impu¬ 
rities in any seed; seeds of all kinds not specially provided 
for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

255. Straw, one dollar and fifty cents per ton. 

256. Teazles, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

257. Vegetables in their natural state, not specially provided for in 

this Act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Fish: 

258. Fish known or labeled as anchovies, sardines, sprats, brislings, 

sardels, or sardellen, packed in oil or otherwise, in bottles, 
jars, tin boxes or cans, shall be dutiable as follows: When in 
packages containing seven and one-half cubic inches or less, 
one and one half cents per bottle, jar, box or can; containing 
more than seven and one-half and not more than twenty-one 
cubic inches, two and one-half cents per bottle, jar, box or 
can; containing more than twenty-one and not more than 
thirty-three cubic inches, five cents per bottle, jar, box or can; 
containing more than thirty-three and not more than seventy 
cubic inches, ten cents per bottle, jar, box or can; if in other 
packages, forty per centum ad valorem. All other fish, (except 
shellfish), in tin packages, thirty per centum ad valorem; fish 
in packages containing less than one-half barrel, and not spe¬ 
cially provided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

259. Fresh water fish not specially provided fi >r in this Act, one-fourth 

of one cent per pound. 

260. Herrings, pickled or salted, one-half of one cent per pound; 

herrings, fresh, one-fourth of one cent per pound. 

261. Fish, fresh, smoked, dried, salted, pickled, frozen, packed in ice 

or otherwise prepared for preservation, not specially provided 
for in this Act, three-fourths of one cent per pound; fish, skinned 
or boned, one and one-fourth cents per pound; mackerel, hali¬ 
but or salmon, fresh, pickled or salted, one cent per pound. 

Fruits and Nuts: 

262. Apples, peaches, quinces, cherries, plums, and pears, green or 

ripe, twenty-five cents per bushel; apples, peaches, pears, and 
other edible fruits, including berries, when dried, desiccated, 
evaporated or prepared in any manner, not specially provided 
for in this Act, two cents per pound; berries, edible, in their 
natural condition, one cent per quart; cranberries, twenty-five 
per centum ad valorem. 

263. Comfits, sweetmeats, and fruits preserved in sugar, molasses, 

spirits, or in their own juices, not specially provided for in this 


30 


Act, one cent per pound and thirty-five per centum ad valorem; 
if containing over ten per centum of alcohol and not specially 
provided for in this Act, thirty-five per centum ad valorem and 
in addition two dollars and fifty cents per j)roof gallon on the 
alcohol contained therein in excess of ten per centum; jellies 
of all kinds, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; pineapples pre¬ 
served in their own juice, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

264. Figs, plums, primes, and prunelles, two cents per pound; raisins 

and other dried grapes, two and one-half cents per pound; 
dates, one-half of one cent per pound; currants, Zante or other, 
two cents per pound; olives, green or prepared, in bottles, jars, 
or similar packages, twenty-five cents per gallon; in casks or . 
otherwise than in bottles, jars, or similar packages, fifteen 
cents per gallon. 

265. Grapes in barrels or other packages, twenty cents per cubic foot 

of capacity of barrels or packages. 

266. Oranges, lemons, limes, grape fruit, shaddocks or pomelos, one 

cent per pound. 

267. Orange peel or lemon peel, preserved, candied, or dried, and 

cocoanut meat or copra desiccated, shredded, cut, or similarly 
prepared, two cents per pound; citron or citron peel, preserved, 
candied, or dried, four cents per pound. 

268. Pineapples, in barrels and other packages, seven cents per cubic 

foot of the capacity of barrels or packages; in bulk, seven dol¬ 
lars per thousand. 

Nuts— 

269. Almonds, not shelled, four cents per pound; clear almonds, 

shelled, six cents per pound. 

270. Filberts and walnuts of all kinds, not shelled, three cents per 

pound; shelled, five cents per pound. 

271. Peanuts or ground beans, uushelled, one-half of one cent per 

pound; shelled, one cent per pound. 

272. Nuts of all kinds, shelled or unshelled, not specially provided 

for in this Act, one cent per pound. 

Meat Products: 

273. Bacon and hams, five cents per pound. 

274. Fresh beef, veal, mutton, and pork, two cents per pound. 

275. Meats of all kinds, prepared or preserved, not specially pro¬ 

vided for in this Act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 

276. Extract of meat, not specially provided for in this Act, thirty- 

five cents per pound; fluid extract of meat, fifteen cents per 
pound, but the dutiable weight of the extract of meat and of 
the fluid extract of meat shall not include the weight of the 
package in which the same is imported. 

277. Lard, two cents per pound. 

278. Poultry, live, three cents per pound; dressed, five cents per 

pound. 

279. Tallow, three-fourths of one cent per pound; wool grease, includ¬ 

ing that known commercially as degras or brown wool grease, 
one-half of one cent per pound. 

Miscellaneous Products : 

280. Chicory-root, raw, dried, or undried, but unground, one cent per 

pound; chicory root, burnt or roasted, ground or granulated, 
or in rolls, or otherwise prepared, and not specially provided 
for in this Act, two and one-half cents per pound. 


31 


281. Chocolate and cocoa, prepared or manufactured, not specially 

provided for in this Act, valued at not over fifteen cents per 
pound, two and one-half cents per pound; valued above fifteen 
and not above twenty-four cents per pound, two and one-half 
cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem; valued above 
twenty-four and not above thirty-five cents per pound, five 
cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem; valued above 
thirty-five cents per pound, fifty per centum ad valorem. The 
weight and value of all coverings, other than plain wooden, 
shall be included in the dutiable weight and value of the fore¬ 
going merchandise; powdered cocoa, unsweetened, five cents 
per pound. 

282. Cocoa-butter or cocoa-butterine, three and one-half cents per 

pound. 

283. Dandelion-root and acorns prepared, and articles used as coflee, 

or as substitutes for coffee not specially provided for in this 
Act, two and one-half cents per pound. 

284. Salt in bags, sacks, barrels, or other packages, twelve cents per 

one hundred pounds; in bulk, eight cents per one hundred 
pounds: Provided , That imported salt in bond may be used in 
curing fish taken by vessels licensed to engage in the fisheries, 
and in curing fish on the shores of the navigable waters of the 
United States, under such regulations as the Secretary of the 
Treasury shall prescribe; and upon proof that the salt has been 
used for either of the purposes stated in this proviso, the duties 
on the same shall be remitted: Provided further , That export¬ 
ers of meats, whether packed or smoked, which have beer 
cured in the United States with imported salt, shall, upon sat¬ 
isfactory proof, under such regulations as the Secretary of the 
Treasury shall prescribe, that such meats have been cured 
with imported salt, have refunded to them from the Treasury 
the duties paid on the salt so used in curing such exported 
a meats, in amounts not less than one hundred dollars. 

285. Starch, including all preparations, from whatever substance pro¬ 

duced, fit for use as starch, one and one-half cents per pound. 

286. Dextrine, burnt starch, gum substitute, or British gum, two cents 

per pound. 

287. Spices: Mustard, ground or prepared, in bottles or otherwise, 

ten cents per pound; capsicum or red pepper, or cayenne pep¬ 
per, two and one-half cents per pound; sage, one cent per 
pound; spices not specially provided for in this Act, three 
cents per pound. 

288. Vinegar, seven and one-half cents per proof gallon. The stand¬ 

ard proof for vinegar shall be taken to be that strength which 
requires thirty-five grains of bicarbonate of potash to neu¬ 
tralize one ounce troy of vinegar. 

Schedule H. —Spirits, Wines, and Other Beverages. 

spirits. 

289. Brandy and other spirits manufactured or distilled from grain 
or other materials, and not specially provided for in this Act, two dol 
lars and twenty-five cents per proof gallon. 

290. Each and every gauge or wine gallon of measurement shall be 
counted as at least one proof gallon; and the standard for determining 


32 


the proof of brandy and other spirits or liquors of any kind imported 
shall be the same as that which is defined in the laws relating to inter¬ 
nal revenue: Provided , That it shall be lawful for the Secretary of the 
Treasury, in his discretion, to authorize the ascertainment of the proof 
of wines, cordials, or other liquors, by distillation or otherwise, in cases 
where it is impracticable to ascertain such proof by the means pre¬ 
scribed by existing law or regulations: And provided further , That any 
brandy or other spirituous or distilled liquors imported in any sized 
cask, bottle, jug, or other package, of or from any country, dependency, 
or province under whose laws similar sized casks, bottles, jugs, or other 
packages of distilled spirits, wine, or other beverage put up or filled in 
the United States are denied entrance into such country, dependency, 
or province, shall be forfeited to the United States; and any brandy or 
other spirituous or distilled liquor imported in a cask of less capacity 
than ten gallons from any country shall be forfeited to the United 
States. 

291. On all compounds or preparations of which distilled spirits are 
a component part of chief value, there shall be levied a duty not less 
than that imposed upon distilled spirits. 

292. Cordials, liqueurs, arrack, absinthe, kirscliwasser, ratafia, and 
other spirituous beverages or bitters of all kinds, containing spirits, and 
not specially provided for in this Act, two dollars and twenty-five cents 
per proof gallon. 

293. No lower rate or amount of duty shall be levied, collected, and 
paid on brandy, spirits, and other spirituous beverages than that fixed 
by law for the description of first proof; but it shall be increased in 
proportion for any greater strength than the strength of first proof, and 
all imitations of brandy or spirits or wines imported by any names 
whatever shall be subject to the highest rate of duty provided for the 
genuine articles respectively intended to be represented, and in no case 
less than one dollar and fifty cents per gallon. 

294. Bay rum or bay water, whether distilled or compounded, of first 
proof, and in proportion for any greater strength than first proof, one 
dollar and fifty cents per gallon. 

WINES. 

295. Champagne and all other sparkling wines, in bottles containing 
each not more than one quart and more than one pint, eight dollars per 
dozen; containing not more than one pint each and more than one-half 
pint, four dollars per dozen; containing one-half pint each or less, two 
dollars per dozen; in bottles or other vessels containing more than one 
quart each, in addition to eight dollars per dozen bottles, on the quan 
tity in excess of one quart, at the rate of two dollars and fifty cents 
per gallon; but no separate or additional duty shall be levied on the 
bottles. • 

296. Still wines, including ginger wine or ginger cordial and ver 
muth, in casks or packages other than bottles or jugs, if containing 
fourteen per centum or less of absolute alcohol, forty cents per gallon; if 
containing more than fourteen per centum of absolute alcohol, fifty cents 
per gallon. In bottles or jugs, per case of one dozen bottles or jugs, con¬ 
taining each not more than one quart and more than one pint, or twenty - 
four bottles or jugs containing each not more than one pint, one 
dollar and sixty cents per case; and any excess beyond these quanti¬ 
ties found in such bottles or jugs shall be subject to a duty of five 
eents per pint or fractional part thereof, but no separate or additional 


33 


duty shall be assessed on the bottles or jugs: Provided , That any wines, 
ginger cordial, or vermuth imported containing more than twenty-four 
per centum of alcohol shall be classed as spirits and pay duty accord- 
ingly: And provided further , That there shall be no constructive or 
other allowance for breakage, leakage, or damage on wines, liquors, 
cordials, or distilled spirits. Wines, cordials, brandy, and other spir¬ 
ituous liquors, including bitters of all kinds, and bay rum or bay 
water, imported in bottles or jugs, shall be packed in packages con¬ 
taining not less than one dozen bottles or jugs in each package, or duty 
shall be paid as if such package contained at least one dozen bottles 
or jugs, and in addition thereto, duty shall be collected on the bottles 
or jugs at the rates which would be chargeable thereon if imported 
empty. The percentage of alcohol in wines and fruit juices shall be 
determined in such manner as the Secretary of the Treasury shall by 
regulation prescribe. 

297. Ale, porter, and beer, in bottles or jugs, forty cents per gallon, 
but no separate or additional duty shall be assessed on the bottles or 
jugs; otherwise than in bottles or jugs, twenty cents per gallon. 

298. Malt extract, fluid, in casks, twenty cents per gallon; in bottles 
or jugs, forty cents per gallon; solid or condensed, forty per centum ad 
valorem. 

299. Cherryjuice and prunejuice, or prune wine, and other fruitjuices 
not specially provided for in this Act, containing no alcohol or not 
more than eighteen per centum of alcohol, sixty cents per gallon; if 
containing more than eighteen per centum of alcohol, sixty cents per 
gallon, and in addition thereto two dollars and seven cents per proof 
gallon on the alcohol contained therein. 

300. Ginger ale, ginger beer, lemonade, soda water, and other similar 
beverages containing no alcohol in plain green or colored, molded or 
pressed, glass bottles, containing each not more than three-fourths of 
a pint, eighteen cents per dozen; containing more than three-fourths of 
a pint each and not more than one and one-half pints, twenty-eight 
cents per dozen; but no separate or additional duty shall be assessed 
on the bottles; if imported otherwise than in plain green or colored, 
molded or pressed, glass bottles, or in such bottles containing more 
than one and one half pints each, fifty cents per gallon and in addition 
thereto, duty shall be collected on the bottles, or other coverings, at the 
rates which would be chargeable thereon if imported empty. 

301. All mineral waters and all imitations of natural mineral waters, 
and all artificial mineral waters not specially provided for in this Act, 
in green or colored glass bottles, containing not more than one pint, 
twenty cents per dozen bottles, if containing more than one pint and 
not more than one quart, thirty cents per dozen bottles. But no sepa¬ 
rate duty shall be assessed upon the bottles. If imported otherwise 
than in plain green or colored glass bottles, or if imported in such bot¬ 
tles containing more than one quart, twenty-four cents per gallon, and 
in addition thereto duty shall be collected upon the bottles or other 
covering at the same rates that would be charged thereon if imported 
empty or separately. 

Schedule I.—Cotton Manufactures. 

302. Cotton thread and carded yarn, warps or warp yarn, in singles, 
whether on beams or in bundles, skeins or cops, or in any other form, 
except spool thread of cotton hereinafter provided for, not colored, 
bleached, dyed, or advanced beyond the condition of singles by group- 

5797—02 - 3 



34 


ing or twisting two or more single yarns together, three cents per 
pound on all numbers up to and including number fifteen, one-fiftli of 
a cent per number per pound on all numbers exceeding number fifteen 
and up to and including number thirty, and one-fourtli of a cent per 
number per pound on all numbers exceeding number thirty; colored, 
bleached, dyed, combed or advanced beyond the condition of singles by 
grouping or twisting two or more single yarns together, whether on 
beams, or in bundles, skeins or cops, or in any other form, except spool 
thread of cotton hereinafter provided for, six cents per pound on all 
numbers up to and including number twenty, and on all numbers 
exceeding number twenty and up to number eighty, one-fourth of one 
cent per number per pound; on number eighty and above, three tenths 
of one cent per number per pound; cotton card laps, roping, sliver or 
roving, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

303. Spool thread of cotton, including crochet, darning, and embroid¬ 
ery cottons on spools or reels, containing on each spool or reel not exceed¬ 
ing one hundred yards of thread, six cents per dozen; exceeding one 
hundred yards on each spool or reel, for every additional hundred yards 
or fractional part thereof in excess of one hundred, six cents per dozen 
spools or reels; if otherwise than on spools or reels, one-half of one cent 
for each one hundred yards or fractional part thereof: Provided , That 
in no case shall the duty be assessed upon a less number of yards than 
is marked on the spools or reels. 

304. Cotton cloth not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, and not exceeding fifty threads to the square inch, counting 
the warp and filling, one cent per square yard; it' bleached, one and 
one-fourth cents per square yard; if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, two cents per square yard. 

305. Cotton cloth, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, exceeding fifty and not exceeding one hundred threads to the 
square inch, counting the warp and filling, and not exceeding six square 
yards to the pound, one and one-fourth cents per square yard; exceed¬ 
ing six and not exceeding nine square yards to the pound, one and one- 
half cents per square yard; exceeding nine square yards to the pound, 
one and three-fourths cents per square yard; if bleached, and not 
exceeding six square yards to the pound, one and one-half cents per 
square yard; exceeding six and not exceeding nine square yards to the 
pound, one and three-fourths cents per square yard; exceeding nine 
square yards to the pound, two and one-fourth cents per square yard; 
if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, and not exceeding six 
square yards to the pound, two and three-fourths cents per square 
yard; exceeding six and not exceeding nine square yards to the pound, 
three and one-fourtli cents per square yard; exceeding nine square 
yards to the pound, three and one-lialf cents per square yard: Provided , 
That on all cotton cloth not exceeding one hundred threads to the square 
inch, counting the warp and filling, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, 
painted, or printed, valued at over seven cents per square yard, twenty- 
five per centum ad valorem; bleached, valued at over nine cents per 
square yard, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; and dyed, colored, 
stained, painted, or printed, valued at over twelve cents per square 
yard, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of thirty per 
centum ad valorem. 

306. Cotton cloth, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, exceeding one hundred and not exceeding one hundred and 
fifty threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, and not 
exceeding four square yards to the pound, one and one-half cents per 


35 


square yard; exceeding four and not exceeding six square yards to the 
pound, two cents per square yard; exceeding six and not exceeding 
eight square yards to the pound, two and one-half cents per square 
yard; exceeding eight square yards to the pound, two and three-fourths 
cents per square yard; if bleached, and not exceeding four square yards 
to the pound, two and one-half cents per square yard; exceeding four 
and not exceeding six square yards to the pound, three cents per square 
yard; exceeding six and not exceeding eight square yards to the pound, 
three and one-half cents per square yard; exceeding eight square yards 
to the pound, three and three-fourths cents per square yard; if dyed, 
colored, stained, painted, or printed, and not exceeding four square 
yards to the pound, three and one half cents per square yard; exceed¬ 
ing four and not exceeding six square yards to the pound, three and 
three-fourths cents per square yard; exceeding six and not exceeding 
eight square yards to the pound, four and one-fourth cents per square 
yard; exceeding eight square yards to the pound, four and one halt 
cents per square yard: Provided , That on all cotton cloth exceeding 
one bundled and not exceeding one hundred and fifty threads to the 
square inch, counting the warp and filling, not bleached, dyed, colored, 
stained, painted, or printed, valued at over nine cents per square yard, 
thirty per centum ad valorem; bleached, valued at over eleven cents 
per square yard, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; dyed, colored, 
stained, painted, or printed, valued at over twelve and one-half cents 
per square yard, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of 
thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

307. Cotton cloth not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, 01 
printed, exceeding one hundred and fifty and not exceeding two hun¬ 
dred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, and not 
exceeding three and one-half square yards to the pound, two cents per 
square yard; exceeding three and one half and not exceeding four 
and one-half square yards to the pound, two and three-fourths cents 
per square yard; exceeding four and one-half and not exceeding six 
square yards to the pound, three cents per square yard; exceeding six 
square yards to the pound, three and one-half cents per square yard; 
if bleached, and not exceeding three .and one-half square yards to the 
pound, two and three-fourths cents per square yard; exceeding three 
and one-half and not exceeding four and one-half square yards to the 
pound, three and one-half cents per square yard; exceeding four and 
one half and not exceeding six square yards to the pound, four cents 
per square yard; exceeding six square yards to the pound, four and 
one-fourth cents per square yard;, if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, and not exceeding three and one half square yards to the 
pound, four and one-fourth cents per square yaid; exceeding three and 
one-lialf and not exceeding four and one half square yards to the 
pound, four and one half cents per square yard; exceeding four and 
one-half and not exceeding six square yards to the pound, four and 
three-fourths cents per square yard;‘exceeding six square yards to the 
pound, five cents per square yard: Provided , That on all cotton cloth 
exceeding one hundred and fifty and not exceeding two hundred 
threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, not bleached, 
dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over ten cents per 
square yard, thirty five per centum ad valorem; bleached, valued at 
over twelve cents per square yard, thirty five per centum ad volorem; 
dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over twelve and 
one-half cents per square yard, there shall be levied, collected, and paid 
a duty of forty per centum ad valorem. 


36 


308. Cotton clotli not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, exceeding two hundred and not exceeding tlireehundred threads 
to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, and not exceeding 
two and one half square yards to the pound, three and one-half cents 
per square yard; exceeding two and one-half and not exceeding three 
and one-half square yards to the pound, four cents per square yard; 
exceeding three and one-half and not exceeding five square yards to 
the pound, four and one-half cents per square yard; exceeding five 
square yards to the pound, five cents per square yard; if bleached, and 
not exceeding two and one half square yards to the pound, four and 
one half cents per square yard; exceeding two and one-half and not 
exceeding three and one-half square yards to the pound, five cents per 
square yard; exceeding three and one-half and not exceeding five square 
yards to the pound, five and one-half cents per square yard; exceeding 
five square yards to the pound, six cents per'square yard; if dyed, col¬ 
ored, stained, painted, or printed, and not exceeding three and one- 
half square yards to the pound, six and one-fourth cents per square 
yard; exceeding three and one-half square yards to the pound, seven 
cents per square yard: Provided , That on all such cotton cloths not 
bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over 
twelve and one-half cents per square yard; bleached, valued at over 
fifteen cents per square yard; and dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, valued at over seventeen and one-half cents per square yard, 
there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of forty per centum ad 
valorem. 

309. Cotton cloth not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or 
printed, exceeding three hundred threads to the square inch, counting 
the warp and filling, and not exceeding two square yards to the pound, 
four cents per square yard; exceeding two and not exceeding three 
square yards to the pound, four and one-half cents per square 
yard; exceeding three and not exceeding four square yards to the 
pound, five cents per square yard; exceeding four square yards to the 
pound, five and one-half cents per square yard; if bleached and not 
exceeding two square yards to the pound, five cents per square yard; 
exceeding two and not exceeding three square yards to the pound, five 
and one-half cents per square yard; exceeding three and not exceeding 
four square yards to the pound, six cents per square yard; exceeding 
four square yards to the pound, six and one-half cents per square yard; 
if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, and not exceeding three 
square yards to the pouud, six and one-half cents per square yard; 
exceeding three square yards to the pound, eight cents per square yard: 
Provided , That on all such cottou cloths not bleached, dyed, colored, 
stained, painted, or printed, valued at over fourteen cents per square 
yard; bleached, valued at over sixteen cents per square yard; and 
dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over twenty cents 
per square yard, there shall be levied,-collected, and paid a duty of 
forty per centum ad valorem. 

310. The term cotton cloth, or cloth, wherever used in the paragraphs 
of this schedule, unless otherwise specially provided for, shall be held 
to include all woven fabrics of cotton in the piece or otherwise, whether 
figured, fancy, or plain, the warp and tilling threads of which can be 
counted by unraveling or other practicable means. 

311. Clotb, composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber and silk, 
whether known as silk-striped sleeve linings, silk stripes, or otherwise, 
of which cotton is the component material of chief value, eight cents 
per square yard and thirty per centum ad valorem: Provided , That 


37 


no such cloth shall pay a less rate of duty than fifty per centum ad 
valorem. Oottou cloth, filled or coated, three cents per square yard 
and twenty per centum ad valorem. 

3115. Handkerchiefs or mufflers composed of cotton, whether in the 
piece or otherwise and whether finished or unfinished, if not hemmed, 
or hemmed only, shall pay the same rate of duty on the cloth con 
tained therein as is imposed on cotton cloth of the same description, 
weight, and count of threads to the square inch; but such handker¬ 
chiefs or mufflers shall not pay a less rate of duty than forty-five per 
centum ad valorem. If such handkerchiefs or mufflers are hemstitched, 
or imitation hemstitched, or revered, or have drawn threads, they shall 
pay a duty of ten per centum ad valorem in addition to the duty here¬ 
inbefore prescribed, and in no case less than fifty-five per centum ad 
valorem; if such handkerchiefs or mufflers are embroidered in any 
manner, whether with an initial letter, monogram, or otherwise, by 
hand or machinery, or are tamboured, appliqued, or trimmed wholly or 
in part with lace or with tucking or insertion, they shall not pay a less 
rate of duty than sixty per centum ad valorem. 

313. Cotton cloth in which other than the ordinary warp and fill¬ 
ing threads have been introduced in the process of weaving to form a 
figure, whether known as lappets or otherwise, and whether unbleached, 
bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, shall pay, in addi¬ 
tion to the duty herein provided for other cotton cloth of the same 
description, or condition, weight, and count of threads to the square 
inch, one cent per square yard if valued at not more than seven cents 
per square yard, and two cents per square yard if valued at more than 
seven cents per square yard. 

314. Clothing, ready-made, and articles of wearing apparel of every 
description, including neck-ties or neckwear composed of cotton or 
other vegetable fiber, or of which cotton or other vegetable fiber is the 
component material of chief value, made up or manufactured, wholly 
or in part, by the tailor, seamstress, or manufacturer, and not other¬ 
wise provided for in .this Act, fifty per centum ad valorem: Provided, 
That any outside garment provided for in this paragraph having india- 
rubber as a component material shall pay a duty of fifteen cents per 
pound and fifty per centum ad valorem. 

315. Plushes, velvets, velveteens, corduroys, and all pile fabrics, cut 
or uncut; any of the foregoing composed of cotton or other vegetable 
fiber, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, nine 
cents per square yard and twenty-five per centum ad valorem; if 
bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, twelve cents per 
square yard and twenty five per centum ad valorem: Provided, That 
corduroys composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, weighing seven 
ounces or over per square yard, shall pay a duty of eighteen cents per 
square yard and twenty-five per centum ad valorem: Provided further, 
That manufactures or articles in any form including such as are com¬ 
monly known as bias dress facings or skirt bindings, made or cut from 
plushes, velvets, velveteens, corduroys, or other pile fabrics composed 
of cotton or other vegetable fiber, shall be subject to the foregoing rates 
of duty and in addition thereto ten per centum ad valorem: Provided 
further , That none of the articles or fabrics provided for in this para¬ 
graph shall pay a less rate of duty than forty-seven and one-half per 
centum ad valorem. 

31G. Curtains, table covers, and all articles manufactured of cotton 
chenille or of which cotton chenille is the component material of chijcf 
value, fifty per centum ad valorem. 


38 


317. Stockings, Lose and half-hose, made on knitting machines or 
frames, composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, and not otherwise 
specially provided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

318. Stockings, hose and half-hose, selvedged, fashioned, narrowed, 
or shaped wholly or in part by knitting machines or frames, or knit by 
hand, including such as are commercially known as seamless stockings, 
hose and half-hose, and clocked stockings, hose or half-hose, all of the 
above composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, finished or unfin¬ 
ished, valued at not more than one dollar per dozen pairs, fifty cents 
per dozen pairs; valued at more than one dollar per dozen pairs, and 
not more than one dollar and fifty cents per dozen pairs, sixty cents 
per dozen pairs; valued at more than one dollar and fifty cents per 
dozen pairs, and not more than two dollars per dozen pairs, seventy 
cents per dozen pairs; valued at more than two dollars per dozen pairs, 
and not more than three dollars per dozen pairs, one dollar and twenty 
cents per dozen pairs; valued at more than three dollars per dozen 
pairs and not more than five dollars per dozen pairs, two dollars per 
dozen pairs; and in addition thereto, upon all the foregoing, fifteen per 
centum ad valorem; valued at more than five dollars per dozen pairs, 
fifty-five per centum ad valorem. 

319. Shirts and drawers, pants, vests, union suits, combination suits, 
tights, sweaters, corset covers and all underwear of every description 
made wholly or in part on knitting machines or frames, or knit by 
hand, finished or unfinished, not including stockings, hose and half¬ 
hose, composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, valued at not more 
than one dollar and fifty cents per dozen, sixty cents per dozen and 
fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at more than one dollar and 
fifty cents per dozen and not more than three dollars per dozen, one 
dollar and ten cents per dozen, and in addition thereto fifteen per 
centum ad valorem; valued at more than three dollars per dozen and 
not more than five dollars per dozen, one dollar and fifty cents per 
dozen, and in addition thereto twenty-five per centum ad valorem; 
valued at more than five dollars per dozen and not more than seven 
dollars per dozen, one dollar and seventy-five cents per dozen, and in 
addition thereto thirty-five per centum ad valorem; valued at more 
than seven dollars per dozen and not more than fifteeu dollars per 
dozen, two dollars and twenty-five cents per dozen, and in addition 
thereto thirty-five per centum ad valorem; valued above fifteen dollars 
per dozen, fifty per centum ad valorem. 

320. Bandings, beltings, bindings, bone casings, cords, garters, lin 
ing for bicycle tires, ribbons, suspenders and braces, tapes, tubing, and 
webs or webbing, any of the foregoing articles made of cotton or other 
vegetable fiber, whether composed in part of india-rubber or otherwise, 
and not embroidered by hand or machinery, forty-five per centum ad 
valorem; spindle banding, woven, braided or twisted lamp, stove, or 
candle wicking made of cotton or other vegetable fiber, ten cents per 
pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; loom harness or healds made 
of cotton or other vegetable fiber, or of which cotton or other vegetable 
fiber rs the component material of chief value, fifty cents per pound and 
twenty-five per centum ad valorem; boot, shoe, and corset lacings made 
of cotton or other vegetable fiber, twenty-five cents per pound and 
fifteen per centum ad valorem; labels, for garments or other articles, 
composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, fifty cents per pound and 
thirty per centum ad valorem. 

321. Cotton table damask, forty per centum ad valorem; cotton duck, 
thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 


39 

322. All manufactures of cotton not specially provided for in this Act, 
forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Schedule J.—Flax, Hemp, and Jute, and Manufactures of. 

323. Flax straw, five dollars per ton. 

324. Flax, not hackled or dressed, one cent per pound. 

325. Flax, hackled, known as “ dressed line,’ 7 three cents per pound. 

326. Tow of fiax, twenty dollars per ton. 

327. Hemp, and tow of hemp, twenty dollars per ton; hemp, hackled, 
known as “line of'hemp,” forty dollars per ton. 

328. Single yarns made of jute, not finer than five lea or number, one 
cent per pound and ten per centum ad valorem; if finer than five lea or 
number, thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

329. Cables and cordage, composed of istle, Tampico fiber, manila, 
sisal grass or sunn, or a mixture of these or any of them, one cent per 
pound; cables and cordage made of hemp, tarred or untarred, two 
cents per pound. 

330. Threads, twines, or cords, made from yarn not finer than five lea 
or number, composed of fiax, hemp, or ramie, or of which these sub¬ 
stances or either of them is the component material of chief value, thir¬ 
teen cents per pound; if made from yarn finer than five lea or number, 
three-fourths of one cent per pound additional for each lea or number, 
or part of a lea or number, in excess of five. 

331. Single yarns in the gray, made of fiax, hemp, or ramie, or a 
mixture of any of them, not finer than eight lea or number, seven cents 
per pound; finer than eight lea or number and not finer than eighty lea 
or number, forty per centum ad valorem; single yarns, made of fiax, 
hemp, or ramie, or a mixture of any of them, finer than eighty lea or num¬ 
ber, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

332. Flax gill netting, nets, webs, and seines shall pay the same duty 
per pound as is imposed in this schedule upon the thread, twine, or 
cord of which they are made, and in addition thereto twenty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

333. Floor mattings, plain, fancy or figured, manufactured from straw, 
round or split, or other vegetable substances not otherwise provided for, 
including what are commonly known as Chinese, Japanese, and India 
straw mattings, valued at not exceeding ten cents per square yard, 
three cents per square yard; valued at exceeding ten cents per square 
yard, seven cents per square yard and twenty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

334. Carpets, carpeting, mats and rugs made of flax, hemp, jute, or 
other vegetable fiber (except cotton), valued at not exceeding fifteen 
cents per square yard, five cents per square yard and thirty-five per 
centum ad valorem; valued above fifteen cents per square yard, ten cents 
per square yard and thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

335. Hydraulic hose, made in whole or in part of flax, hemp, ramie, 
or jute, twenty cents per pound. 

336. Tapes composed wholly or in part of flax, woven with or without 
metal threads, on reels, spools, or otherwise, and designed expressly 
for use in the manufacture of measuring tapes, forty per centum ad 
valorem. 

337. Oilcloth for floors, stamped, painted, or printed, including lino¬ 
leum or corticene, figured or plain, and all other oilcloth (except silk 
oilcloth) under twelve feet in width not specially provided for herein, 
eight cents per square yard and fifteen per centum ad valorem; oil 


40 


cloth for floors and linoleum or corticene, twelve feet and over in width, 
inlaid linoleum or corticene, and cork carpets, twenty cents per square 
yard and tweuty per centum ad valorem; waterproof cloth, composed 
of cotton or other vegetable fiber, whether composed in part of india- 
rubber or otherwise, ten cents per square yard and twenty per centum 
ad valorem. 

338. Shirt collars and cuffs, composed of cotton, forty-five cents per 
dozen pieces and fifteen per centum ad valorem; composed in whole or 
in part of linen, forty cents per dozen pieces and twenty per centum ad 
valorem. 

339. Laces, lace window curtains, tidies, pillow 'shams, bed sets, 
insertings, flouncings, and other lace articles; handkerchiefs, napkins, 
wearing apparel, and other articles, made wholly or in part of lace, 
or in imitation of lace; nets or nettings, veils and veilings, etamines, 
vitrages, neck ruffiings, ruchings, tuckings, flutings, and quillings; 
embroideries and all trimmings, including braids, edgings, insertings, 
flouncings, galloons, gorings, and bands; wearing apparel, handker¬ 
chiefs, and other articles or fabrics embroidered in any manner by hand 
or machinery, whether with a letter, monogram, or otherwise; tam¬ 
boured or appliqueed articles, fabrics or wearing apparel; hemstitched 
or tucked flouncings or skirtings, and articles made wholly or in part 
of ruffiings, tuckings, or ruchings; all of the foregoing, composed wholly 
or in chief value of flax, cotton, or other vegetable fiber, and not else¬ 
where specially provided for in this Act, whether composed in part of 
india rubber or otherwise, sixty per centum ad valorem: Provided , 
That no wearing apparel or other article or textile fabric, when embroid¬ 
ered by hand or machinery, shall pay duty at a less rate than that 
imposed in any schedule of this Act upon any embroideries of the mate¬ 
rials of which such embroidery is composed. 

340. Lace window curtains, pillow shams, and bed sets, finished or 
unfinished, made on the Nottingham lace-curtain machine or on the 
Nottingham warp machine, and composed of cotton or other vegetable 
fiber, when counting five points or spaces between the warp threads to 
the inch, one cent per square yard; when counting more than five such 
points or spaces to the inch, one-half of one cent per square yard in 
addition for each such point or space to the inch in excpss of five; and 
in addition thereto, on all the foregoing articles in this paragraph, 
twenty per centum ad valorem: Provided , That none of the above- 
named articles shall pay a less rate of duty than fifty per centum ad 
valorem. 

341. Plain woven fabrics of single jute yarns, by whatever name 
known, not exceeding sixty inches in width, weighing not less than six 
ounces per square yard and not exceeding thirty threads to the square 
inch, counting the warp and filling, five-eighths of one cent per pound 
and fifteen per centum ad valorem; if exceeding thirty and not exceed¬ 
ing fifty-five threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, 
seven-eighths of one cent per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

342. All pile fabrics of which flax is the component material of chief 
value, sixty per centum ad valorem. 

343. Bags or sacks made from plain woven fabrics, of single jute 
yarns, not dyed, colored, stained, painted, printed, or bleached, and 
not exceeding thirty threads to the square inch, counting the warp and 
filling, seven-eighths of one cent per pound and fifteen per centum ad 
valorem. 

344. Bagging for .cotton, gunny cloth, and similar fabrics, suitable 
for covering cotton, composed of single yarns made of jute, jute butts, 


41 


or hemp, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, not 
exceeding- sixteen threads to the square inch, counting the warp and 
filling, and weighing not less than fifteen ounces per square yard, 
six-tenths of one cent per square yard. 

345. Handkerchiefs composed of flax, hemp, or ramie, or of which 
these substances, or either of them, is the component material of chief 
value, whether in the piece or otherwise, and whether finished or unfin¬ 
ished, not hemmed or hemmed only, fifty per centum ad valorem; if 
hemstitched, or imitation hemstitched, or revered, or with drawn 
threads, but not embroidered or initialed, fifty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

346. Woven fabrics or articles not specially provided for in this Act, 
composed of flax, hemp, or ramie, or of which these substances or either 
of them is the component material of chief value, weighing four and 
one half ounces or more per square yard, when containing not more than 
sixty threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, one and 
three-fourths cents per square yard; containing more than sixty and not 
more than one hundred and twenty threads to the square inch, two and 
three-fourths cents per square yard; containing more than one hundred 
and twenty and not more than one hundred and eighty threads to the 
square inch, six cents per square yard; containing more than one hun¬ 
dred and eighty threads to the square inch, nine cents per square yard, 
and in addition thereto, on all the foregoing, thirty per centum ad 
valorem: Provided, That none of the foregoing articles in this para¬ 
graph shall pay a less rate of duty than fifty per centum ad valorem. 
Woven fabrics of flax, hemp, or ramie, or of which these substances or 
either of them is the component material of chief value, including such 
as is known as shirting cloth, weighiug less than four and one-half 
ounces per square yard and containing more than one hundred threads 
to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, thirty-five per centum 
ad valorem. 

347. All manufactures of flax, hemp, ramie, or other vegetable fiber, 
or of which these substances, or either of them, is the component mate¬ 
rial of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, forty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

Schedule K.—Wool and Manufactures of Wool. 

348. All wools, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like ani¬ 
mals shall be divided, for the purpose of fixing the duties to be charged 
thereon, into the three following classes: 

349. Class one, that is to say, merino, mestiza, metz, or metis wools, 
or other wools of Merino blood, immediate or remote, Down clothing 
wools, and wools of like character with any of the preceding, including 
Bagdad wool, China lamb’s wool, Castel Branco, Adrianople skin wool 
or butcher’s wool, and such as have been heretofore usually imported 
into the United States from Buenos Ayres, New Zealand, Australia, 
Cape of Good Hope, Bussia, Great Britain, Canada, Egypt, Morocco, 
and elsewhere, and all wools not hereinafter included in classes two 
and three. 

350. Class two, that is to say, Leicester, Cotswold, Lincolnshire, 
Down combing wools, Canada long wools, or other like combing wools 
of English blood, and usually known by the terms herein used, and 
also hair of the camel, Angora goat, alpaca, and other like animals. 

351. Class three, that is to say, Donskoi, native South American, 
Cordova, Valparaiso, native Smyrna, liussiau camel’s hair, and all such 


42 


wools of like character as hare been heretofore usually imported into 
the United States from Turkey, Greece, Syria, and elsewhere, excepting 
improved wools hereinafter provided for. 

352. The standard samples of all wools which are now or may be here¬ 
after deposited in the principal custom houses of the United States, 
under the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury, shall be the 
standards for the classification of wools under this Act, and the Secre¬ 
tary of the Treasury is authorized to renew these standards and to 
make such additions to them from time to time as may be required, 
and he shall cause to be deposited like standards in other custom¬ 
houses of the United States when they may be needed. 

353. Whenever wools of class three shall have been improved by the 
admixture of Merino or English blood, from their present character as 
represented by the standard samples now or hereafter to be deposited 
in the principal custom-houses of the United States, such improved 
wools shall be classified for duty either as class one or as class two, as 
the case may be. 

| 354. The duty on wools of the first class which shall be imported 
washed shall be twice the amount of the duty to which they would be 
subjected if imported unwashed; and the duty on wools of the first and 
second classes which shall be imported scoured shall be three times the 
duty to which they would be subjected if imported unwashed. The 
duty on wools of the third class, if imported in condition for use in 
carding or spinning into yarns, or which shall not contain more than 
eight per cent of dirt or other foreign substance, shall be three times 
the duty to which they would otherwise be subjected. 

! 355. Unwashed wools shall be considered such as shall have been 
shorn from the sheep without any cleansing; that is, in their natural 
condition. Washed wools shall be considered such as have been washed 
with water only on the sheep’s back, or on the skin. Wools of the 
first and second classes washed in any other manner than on the sheep’s 
back or on the skin shall be considered as scoured wool. 

! 350. The duty upon wool of the sheep or hair of the camel, Angora 

goat, alpaca, and other like animals, of class one and class two, which 
shall be imported in any other than ordinary condition, or which has 
been sorted or increased in value by the rejection of any part of the 
original fleece, shall be twice the duty to which it would be otherwise 
subject: Provided , That skirted wools as imported in eighteen hundred 
and ninety and prior thereto are hereby excelled. The duty upon wool 
of the sheep or hair of the camel, Angora goat, alpaca, and other like 
animals of any class which shall be changed in its character or condi¬ 
tion for the purpose of evading the duty, or which shall be reduced in 
value by the admixture of dirt or any other foreign substance, shall be 
twice the duty to which it would be otherwise subject. When the duty 
assessed upon any wool equals three times or more that which would be 
assessed if said wool was imported unwashed, the duty shall not be 
doubled on account of the wool being sorted. If any bale or package 
of wool or hair specified in this Act invoiced or entered as of any speci¬ 
fied class, or claimed by the importer to be dutiable as of any specified 
class, shall contain any wool or hair subject to a higher rate of duty 
than the class so specified, the whole bale or package" shall be subject 
to the highest rate of duty chargeable on wool of the class subject to 
such higher rate of duty, and if any bale or package be claimed by the 
importer to be shoddy, mungo, flocks, wool, hair, or other material of 
any class specified in this Act, and such bale contain any admixture of 
aay one or more of said materials, or of any other material, the whole 


43 


bale or package shall be subject to duty at the highest rate imposed 
upon any article in said bale or package. 

357. The duty upon all wools and hair of the first class shall be 
eleven cents per pound, and upon all wools or hair of the second class 
twelve cents per pound. 

358. On wools of the third class and on camel’s hair of the third 
class the value whereof shall be twelve cents or less per pound, the 
duty shall be four cents per pound. 

359. On wools of the third class, and on camel’s hair of the third 
class, the value whereof shall exceed twelve cents per pound, the duty 
shall be seven cents per pound. 

300. The duty on wools on the skin shall be one cent less per pound 
than is imposed in this schedule on other wools of the same class and 
condition, the quantity and value to be ascertained under such rules as 
the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. 

361. Top waste, stubbing waste, roving waste, ring waste, and gar- 
netted waste, thirty cents per pound. 

362. Shoddy, twenty-five cents per pound; noils, wool extract, yarn 
waste, thread waste, and all other wastes composed wholly or in part 
of wool, and not specially provided for in this Act, twenty cents per 
pound. 

303. Woolen rags, mungo, and flocks, ten cents per pound. 

304. Wool and hair which have been advanced in any maimer or by 
any process of manufacture beyond the washed or scoured condition, 
not specially provided for in this Act, shall be subject to the same 
duties as are imposed upon manufactures of wool not specially provided 
for in this Act. 

305. On yarns made wholly or in part of wool, valued at not more 
than thirty cents per pound, the duty per pound shall be two and one- 
half times the duty imposed by this Act on one pound of unwashed 
wool of the first class; valued at more than thirty cents per pound, the 
duty per pound shall be three and one half times the duty imposed by 
this Act on one pound of unwashed wool of the first class, and in addi¬ 
tion thereto, upon all the foregoing, forty per centum ad valorem. 

360. On cloths, knit fabrics, and all manufactures of every descrip¬ 
tion made wholly or in part of wool, not specially provided for in this 
Act, valued at not more than forty cents per pound, the duty per pound 
shall be three times the duty imposed by this Act on a pound of 
unwashed wool of the first class; valued at above forty cents per pound 
and not above seventy cents per pound, the duty per pound shall be 
four times the duty imposed by this Act on one pound of unwashed 
wool of the first class, and in addition thereto, upon all the foregoing, 
fifty per centum ad valorem; valued at over seventy cents per pound, 
the duty per pound shall be four times the duty imposed by this Act on 
one pound of unwashed wool of the first class and fifty-five per centum 
ad valorem. 

367. On blankets, and flannels for underwear composed wholly or in 
part of wool, valued at not more than forty cents per pound, the duty 
per pound shall be the same as the duty imposed by this Act on two 
pounds of unwashed wool of the first class, and in addition thereto 
thirty per centum ad valorem; valued at more than forty cents and not 
more than fifty cents per pound, the duty per pound shall be three 
times the duty imposed by this Act on one pound of unwashed wool of 
the first class, and in addition thereto thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 
On blankets composed wholly or in part of wool, valued at more than 
fifty cents per pound, the duty per pound shall be three times the duty 


44 


imposed by this Act on one pound of unwashed wool of the first class, 
and in addition thereto forty per centum ad valorem. Flannels com¬ 
posed wholly or in part of wool, valued at above fifty cents per pound, 
shall be classified and pay the same duty as women’s and children’s 
dress goods, coat linings, Italian cloths, and goods of similar character 
and description provided by this Act: Provided , That on blankets over 
three yards in length the same duties shall be paid as on cloths. 

368. On women’s and children’s dress goods, coat linings, Italian 
cloths, and goods of similar description and character of which the 
warp consists wholly of cotton or other vegetable material with the 
remainder of the fabric composed wholly or in part of wool, valued at 
not exceeding fifteen cents per square yard, the duty shall be seven 
cents per square yard; valued at more than fifteen cents per square 
yard, the duty shall be eight cents per square yard; and in addition 
thereto on all the foregoing valued at not above seventy cents per 
pound, fifty per centum ad valorem; valued above seventy cents per 
pound, fifty-five per centum ad valorem: Provided , That on all the 
^Aegoing, weighing over four ounces i)er square yard, the duty shall 
oe the same as imposed by this schedule on cloths. 

369. On women’s and children’s dress goods, coat linings, Italian 
cloths, bunting, and goods of similar description or character composed 
wholly or in part of wool, and not specially provided for in this Act, 
the duty shall be eleven cents per square yard; and in addition thereto 
on all the foregoing valued at not above seventy cents per pound, fifty 
per centum ad valorem; valued above seventy cents per pound, fifty- 
five per centum ad valorem: Provided , That on all the foregoing, weigh¬ 
ing over four ounces per square yard, the duty shall be the same as 
imposed by this schedule on cloths. 

370. On clothing, ready-made, and articles of wearing apparel of 
every description, including shawls whether knitted or woven, and 
knitted articles of every description, made up or manufactured wholly 
or in part, felts not woven and not specially provided for in this Act, 
composed wholly or in part of wool, the duty per pound shall be four 
times the duty imposed by this Act on one pound of unwashed wool of 
the first class, and in addition thereto sixty per centum ad valorem. 

371. Webbings, gorings, suspenders, braces, bandings, beltings, 
bindings, braids, galloons, edgings, insertings, flouncings, fringes, 
gimps, cords, cords and tassels, laces and other trimmings and articles 
made wholly or in part of lace, embroideries and articles embroidered 
by hand or machinery, head nets, netting, buttons or barrel buttons or 
buttons of other forms for tassels or ornaments, and manufactures of 
wool ornamented with beads or spangles of whatever material com¬ 
posed, any of the foregoing made of wool or of which wool is a com¬ 
ponent material, whether composed in part of india-rubber or otherwise, 
fifty cents per pound and sixty x>er centum ad valorem. 

372. Aubusson, Axminster, moquette, and chenille carpets, figured 
or plain, and all carpets or carpeting of like character or description, 
sixty cents per square yard, and in addition thereto forty per centum 
ad valorem. 

373. Saxony, Wilton, and Tournay velvet carpets, figured or plain, 
and all carpets or carpeting of like character or description, sixty cents 
per square yard, and in addition thereto forty per centum ad valorem. 

374. Brussels carpets, figured or plain, and all carpets or carpeting 
of like character or description, forty-four cents per square yard, and 
in addition thereto forty per centum ad valorem. 

375. Velvet and tapestry velvet carpets, figured or plain, printed on 


45 


the warp or otherwise, arid all carpets or carpeting of like character or 
description, forty cents per square yard, and in addition thereto forty 
per centum ad valorem. 

376. Tapestry Brussels carpets, figured or plain, and all carpets or 
carpeting of like character or description, printed on the warp or other¬ 
wise, twenty-eight cents per square yard, and in addition thereto forty 
per centum ad valorem. 

377. Treble ingrain, three-ply, and all chain Venetian carpets, twenty- 
two cents per square yard, and in addition thereto forty per centum 
ad valorem. 

378. Wool'Dutch and two-ply ingrain carpets, eighteen cents per 
square yard, and in addition thereto forty per centum ad valorem. 

379. Carpets of every description woven whole £>r rooms, and Oriental, 
Berlin, Aubusson, Axminster, and similar rugs, ten cents per square 
foot and in addition thereto, forty per centum ad valorem. 

380. Druggets and bookings, printed, colored, or otherwise, twenty- 
two cents per square yard, and in addition thereto forty per centum ad 
valorem. 

381. Carpets and carpeting of wool, flax, or cotton, or composed in 
part of either, not specially provided for in this Act, fifty per centum 
ad valorem. 

382. Mats, rugs for floors, screens, covers, hassocks, bed sides, art 
squares, and other portions of carpets or carpeting made wholly or in 
part of wool, and not specially provided for in this Act, shall be sub¬ 
jected to the rate of duty herein imposed on carpets or carpetings of 
like character or description. 

383. Whenever, in any schedule of this Act, the word “ wool” is used 
in connection with a manufactured article of which it is a component 
material, it shall be held to include wool or hair of the sheep, camel, 
goat, alpaca or other animal, whether manufactured by the woolen, 
worsted, felt, or any other process. 

Schedule L.—Silks and Silk Goods. 

384. Silk partially manufactured from cocoons or from waste silk, and 
not further advanced or manufactured than carded or combed silk, 
forty cents per pound. 

385. Thrown silk, not more advanced than singles, tram, organzine, 
sewing silk, twist, floss, and silk threads or yarns of every description, 
except spun silk, thirty per centum ad valorem; spun silk in skeins, 
cops, warps, or on beams, valued at not exceeding one dollar per pound, 
twenty cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at 
over one dollar per pound and not exceeding one dollar and fifty cents 
per pound, thirty cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; 
valued at over one dollar and fifty cents per pound and not exceeding 
two dollars per pound, forty cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad 
valorem; valued at over two dollars per pound and not exceeding two 
dollars and fifty cents per pound, fifty cents per pound and fifteen per 
centum ad valorem; valued at over two dollars and fifty cents per pound, 
sixty cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; but in no 
case shall the foregoing articles pay a less rate of duty than thirty-five 
per centum ad valorem. 

380. Velvets, velvet or plush ribbons, chenilles, or other pile fabrics, 
cut or uncut, composed of silk, or of which silk is the component 
material of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, one dol¬ 
lar and fifty cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; 


46 


plushes, composed of silk, or of which silk is the component material 
of chief value, one dollar per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; 
but in no case shall the foregoing articles pay a less rate of duty than 
fifty per centum ad valorem. 

387. Woven fabrics in the piece, not specially provided for in this 
Act, weighing not less than one and one-third ounces per square yard 
and not more than eight ounces per square yard, and containing not 
more than twenty per centum in weight of silk, if in the gum, fifty 
cents per pound, and if dyed in the piece, sixty cents per pound; if 
containing more than twenty per centum and not more than thirty 
per centum in weight of silk, if in the gum, sixty-five cents per pound, 
and if dyed in the piece, eighty cents per pound; if containing more 
than thirty per centiyn and not more than forty-five per centum in 
weight of silk, if in the gum, ninety cents per pound, and if dyed in 
the piece, one dollar and ten cents per pound; if dyed in the thread 
or yarn and containing not more than thirty x>er centum in weight of 
silk, if black (except selvedges), seventy-five cents per pound, and if 
other than black, ninety cents per pound; if containing more than 
thirty and not more than forty-five per centum in weight of silk, if 
black (except selvedges), one dollar and ten cents per pound, and if 
other than black, one dollar and thirty cents per pound; if containing 
more than forty five per centum in weight of silk, or if composed 
wholly of silk, if dyed in the thread or yarn and weighted in the dye¬ 
ing so as to exceed the original weight of the raw silk, if black (except 
selvedges), one dollar and fifty cents per pound, and if other than 
black, two dollars and twenty-five cents per pound; if dyed in the 
thread or yarn, and the weight is not increased by dyeing beyond the 
original weight of the raw silk, three dollars per pound; if in the gum, 
two dollars and fifty cents per pound; if boiled off, or dyed in the 
piece, or printed, three dollars per pound; if weighing less than one 
and one-third ounces and more than one-third of an ounce per square 
yard, if in the gum, or if dyed in the thread or yarn, two and one-half 
dollars pi r pound ; if weighing less than one and one-third ounces and 
more than one-third of an ounce per square yard, if boiled off, three 
dollars per pound; if dyed or printed in the piece, three dollars and 
twenty-five cents per pound; if weighing not more than one-third of 
an ounce per square yard, four dollars and fifty cents per pound; but 
in no case shall any of the foregoing fabrics in this paragraph pay a 
less rate of duty than fifty per centum ad valorem. 

388. Handkerchiefs or mufflers composed wholly or in part of silk, 
whether in the piece or otherwise, finished or unfinished, if not hemmed 
or hemmed only, shall pay the same rate of duty as is imposed on goods in 
the piece of the same description, weight, and condition as provided for 
in this schedule; but such handkerchiefs or mufflers shall not pay a less 
rate of duty than fifty per centum ad valorem; if such handkerchiefs 
or mufflers are hemstitched or imitation hemstitched, or revered or have 
drawn threads, or are embroidered in any manner, whether with an 
initial letter, monogram, or otherwise, by hand or machinery, or are 
tamboured, appliqued, or are made or trimmed wholly or in part with 
lace, or with tucking or insertion, they shall pay a duty of ten per centum 
ad valorem in addition to the duty hereinbefore prescribed, and in no 
case less than sixty per centum ad valorem. 

389. Bandings, including hat bands, beltings, bindings, bone casings, 
braces, cords, cords and tassels, garters, gorings, suspenders, tubings, 
and webs and webbings, composed wholly or in part of silk, and whether 
composed in part of india-rubber or otherwise, if not embroidered in 
any manner by hand or machinery, fifty per centum ad valorem. 


47 


390. Laces, and articles made wholly or in part of lace, edgings, 
insertings, galloons, chiffon or other flouncings, nets or nettings and 
veilings, neck rutflings, ruchings, braids, fringes, trimmings, embroid¬ 
eries and articles embroidered by hand or machinery, or tamboured or 
appliqued, clothing ready made, and articles of wearing apparel of 
every description, including knit goods, made up or manufactured in 
whole or in part by the tailor, seamstress, or manufacturer; all of the 
above-named articles made of silk, or of which silk is the component 
material of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, and silk 
goods ornamented with beads or spangles, of whatever material com¬ 
posed, sixty per centum ad valorem: Provided , That any wearing 
apparel or other articles provided for in this paragraph (except gloves) 
when composed in part of india-rubber, shall be subject to a duty of 
sixty per centum ad valorem. 

391. All manufactures of silk, or of which silk is the component 
material of chief value, including such as have india-rubber as a com¬ 
ponent material, not specially provided for in this Act, and all Jacquard 
figured goods in the piece, made on looms, of which silk is the compo¬ 
nent material of chief value, dyed in the yarn, and containing two or 
more colors in the filling, fifty x>er centum ad valorem: Provided , That 
all manufactures, of which wool is a component material, shall be classi¬ 
fied and assessed for duty as manufactures of wool. 

392. In ascertaining the weight of silk under the provisions of this 
schedule, the weight shall be taken in the condition in which found in 
the goods, without deduction therefrom for any dye, coloring matter, or 
other foreign substance or material. 

Schedule M.— Pulp, Papers, and Books. 

Pulp and Paper : 

393. Mechanically ground wood pulp, one-twelfth of one cent per 

pound, dry weight; chemical wood pulp, unbleached, one-sixtli 
of one cent per pound, dry weight; bleached, one-fourth of one 
cent per pound, dry weight: Provided , That if any country or 
dependency shall impose an export duty on pulp wood exported 
to the United States, the amount of such export duty shall be 
added, as an additional duty, to the duties herein imposed 
upon wood pulp, when imported from such country or depend¬ 
ency. 

394. Sheathing paper and roofing felt, ten per centum ad valorem. 

395. Filter masse or filter stock, composed wholly or in part of wood 

pulp, wood flour, cotton or other vegetable fiber, one and one- 
half cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

39G. Printing paper, unsized, sized or glued, suitable for books and 
newspapers, valued at not above two cents per pound, three- 
tenths of one cent per pound; valued above two cents and not 
above two and one half cents per pound, four-tenths of one cent 
per pound; valued above two and one-half cents per pound and 
not above three cents per pound, five-tenths of one cent per 
pound; valued above three cents and not above four cents per 
pound, six-tenths ot one cent per pound; valued above four 
cents and not above five cents per pound, eight tenths of one 
cent per pound; valued above five cents per pound, fifteen per 
centum ad valorem: Provided , That if any country or depend¬ 
ency shall impose an export duty upon pulp wood exported to 
the United States, there shall be imposed upon printing paper 


48 


when imported from such country or dependency, an additional 
duty of one-tenth of one cent per pound for each dollar of 
export duty per cord so imposed, and proportionately for frac¬ 
tions of a dollar of such export duty. 

397. Papers commonly known as copying paper, stereotype paper, 

paper known as bibulous paper, tissue paper, pottery paper, 
and all similar papers, white, colored or printed, weighing not 
over six pounds to the ream of four hundred and eighty sheets, 
on a basis of twenty by thirty inches, and whether in reams or 
any other form, six cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad 
valorem; if weighing over six pounds and not over ten pounds 
to the ream, and letter copying books, whether wholly or partly 
manufactured, five cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad 
valorem; crepe paper and filtering paper, five cents per pound 
and fifteen j)er centum ad valorem. 

398. Surface-coated papers not specially provided for in this Act, 

two and one half cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad 
valorem; if printed, or wholly or partly covered with metal or 
its solutions, or with gelatin or flock, three cents per pound 
and twenty per centum ad valorem; parchment papers, two 
cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem; plain basic 
photographic papers for albumenizing, sensitizing, or baryta 
coating, three cents per pound and ten per centum ad valo¬ 
rem; albumenized or sensitized paper or paper otherwise sur¬ 
face coated for photographic purposes, thirty per centum ad 
valorem. 

Manufactures of pafer: 

399. Paper envelopes, plain, twenty per centum ad valorem; if bor¬ 

dered, embossed, printed, tinted, or decorated, thirty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

400. Lithographic prints from stone, zinc, aluminum or other material, 

bound or unbound (except cigar labels, flaps, and bands, let¬ 
tered, or otherwise, music and illustrations when forming a part 
of a periodical or newspaper and accompanying the same, or 
if bound in or forming a part of printed books, not specially 
provided for in this Act), on paper or other material not 
exceeding eight one-thousandths of one inch in thickness, 
twenty cents per pound ; on paper or other material exceeding 
eight one thousandths of one inch and not exceeding twenty 
one-thousandths of one inch in thickness, and exceeding thirty- 
five square inches, but not exceeding four hundred square 
inches cutting size in dimensions, eight cents per pound; 
exceeding four hundred square inches cutting size in dimen¬ 
sions, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; prints exceeding 
eight one-thousandths of one inch and not exceeding twenty 
one-thousandths of one inch in thickness, and not exceeding 
thirty-five square inches cutting size in dimensions, five cents 
per pound; lithographic prints from stone, zinc, aluminum or 
other material, on cardboard or other material, exceeding 
twenty one-thousandths of one inch in thickness, six cents per 
pound; lithographic cigar labels, flaps and bands, lettered or 
blank, printed from stone, zinc, aluminum or other material, 
if printed in less than eight colors (bronze printing to be 
counted as two colors), but not including labels, haps and 
bands printed in whole or in part in metal leaf, twenty cents 


49 


per pound. Labels, flaps and bands, if printed entirely in 
bronze printing, fifteen cents per pound; labels, flaps and 
bauds printed in eight or more colors, but not including labels, 
flaps and bands printed in whole or in part in metal leaf, thirty 
cents per pound; labels, flaps and bands printed in whole or in 
part in metal leaf, fifty cents per pound. Books of paper or 
other material for children’s use, containing illuminated litho¬ 
graphic prints, not exceeding in weight twenty-four ounces 
each, and all booklets and fashion magazines or periodicals 
printed in whole or in part by lithographic process or deco¬ 
rated by hand, eight cents per pound. 

401. Writing, letter, note, hand-made, drawing, ledger, bond, record, 

tablet, and typewriter paper, weighing not less than ten 
pounds and not more than fifteen pounds to the ream, two 
cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem; weighing 
more than fifteen pounds to the ream, three and one half cents 
per pound and fifteen per centum ad valorem; but if any such 
paper is ruled, bordered, embossed, printed, or decorated in 
any manner, it shall pay ten per centum ad valorem in addi¬ 
tion to the foregoing rates: Provided , That in computing the 
duty on such paper every one hundred and eighty thousand 
square inches shall be taken to be a ream. 

402. Paper hangings and paper for screens or fireboards, and all other 

paper not specially provided for in this Act, twenty-five per 
centum ad valorem; all Jacquard designs of one line paper, or 
parts of such designs, finished or unfinished, thirty-five per 
centum ad valorem; all Jacquard designs cut on Jacquard 
cards, or parts of such designs, finished or unfinished, thirty- 
five per centum ad valorem. 

Manufactures of Paper : 

403. Books of all kinds, including blank books and pamphlets, and 

engravings bound or unbound, photographs, etchings, maps, 
charts, music in books or sheets, and printed matter, all the 
foregoing not specially provided for in this Act, twenty-five per 
centum ad valorem. 

404. Photograph, autograph, and scrap albums, wholly or partly 

manufactured, thirty five per centum ad valorem. 

405. All fancy boxes made of paper, or of which paper is the compo¬ 

nent material of chief value, or if covered with surface-coated 
paper, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

406. Playing cards, in packs not exceeding fifty-four cards and at a 

like rate for any number in excess, ten cents per pack and 
twenty per centum ad valorem. 

407. Manufactures of paper, or of which paper is the component 

material of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, 
thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Schedule N.—Sundries. 

408. Beads of all kinds, not threaded or strung, thirty five per centum 
ad valorem; fabrics, nets or nettings, laces, embroideries, galloons, 
wearing apparel, ornaments, trimmings and other articles not specially 
provided for in this Act, composed wholly or in part of beads or spangles 
made of glass or paste, gelatin, metal, or other material, but not com¬ 
posed in part of wool, sixty per centum ad valorem. 

5797—02-4 



50 


400. Braids, plaits, laces, and willow sheets or squares, composed 
wholly of straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, osier, or rattan, suitable 
for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, or hoods, not bleached, dyed, 
colored or stained, fifteen per centum ad valorem; if bleached, dyed, 
colored or stained, twenty per centum ad valorem; hats, bonnets, and 
hoods, composed of straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, osier, or rat¬ 
tan, whether wholly or partly manufactured, but not trimmed, thirty- 
five per centum ad valorem; if trimmed, fifty per centum ad valorem. 
But the terms “grass” and “straw” shall be understood to mean these 
substances in their natural form and structure, and not the separated 
fiber thereof. 

410. Brushes, brooms and feather dusters of all kinds, and hair pen¬ 
cils in quills or otherwise, forty per centum ad valorem. 

411. Bristles, sorted, bunched or prepared, seven and one-half cents 
per pound. 

Buttons and Button Forms: 

412. Trousers buckles made wholly or partly of iron or steel, or parts 

thereof, valued at not more than fifteen cents per hundred, 
five cents per hundred; valued at more than fifteen cents per 
hundred and not more than fifty cents per hundred, ten cents 
j>er hundred; valued at more than fifty cents per hundred, 
fifteen cents per hundred; and in addition thereto on each and 
all of the above buckles or parts of buckles, fifteen per centum 
ad valorem. 

413. Button forms: Bastings, mohair, cloth, silk, or other manufac¬ 

tures of cloth, woven or made in patterns of such size, shape, 
or form, or cut in such manner as to be fit for buttons exclu¬ 
sively, ten per centum ad valorem. 

414. Buttons or parts of buttons and button molds or blanks, finished 

or unfinished, shall pay duty at the following rates, the line 
button measure being one-fortieth of one inch, namely: Buttons 
known commercially as agate buttons, metal trousers buttons, 
(except steel), and nickel bar buttons, one-twelfth of one cent 
per line per gross; buttons of bone, and steel trousers buttons, 
one-fourth of one cent per line per gross; buttons of pearl or 
shell, one and one-half cents per line per gross; buttons of 
horn, vegetable ivory, glass, or metal, not specially provided 
for in this Act, three-fourths of one cent per line per gross, and 
in addition thereto, on all the foregoing articles in this para¬ 
graph, fifteen per centum ad valorem; shoe buttons made of 
paper, board, papier mache, pulp or other similar material, not 
specially provided for in this Act, valued at not exceeding 
three cents per gross, one cent per gross; buttons not specially 
provided for in this Act, and all collar or cuff buttons and 
studs, fifty per centum ad valorem. 

415. Coal, bituminous, and all coals containing less than ninety-two 
per centum of fixed carbon, and shale, sixty-seven cents per ton of 
twenty-eight bushels, eighty pounds to the bushel; coal slack or culm, 
such as will pass through a half-inch screen, fifteen cents per ton of 
twenty-eight bushels, eighty pounds to the bushel: Provided , That on 
all coal imported into the United States, which is afterwards used for 
fuel on board vessels propelled by steam and engaged in trade with 
foreign countries, or in trade between the Atlantic and Pacific ports 
of the United States, and which are registered under the laws of the 
United States, a drawback shall be allowed equal to the duty imposed 
by law upon such coal, and shall be paid under such regulations as the 


51 


Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe; coke, twenty per centum ad 
valorem. 

41G. Cork bark, cut into squares or cubes, eight cents per pound; 
manufactured corks over three-fourths of an inch in diameter measured 
at larger end, fifteen cents per pound; three-fourths of an inch and less 
in diameter, measured at larger end, twenty-five cents per pound; cork, 
artificial, or cork substitutes, manufactured from cork waste and not 
otherwise provided for, eight cents per pound. 

417. Dice, draughts, chessmen, chess balls, and billiard, pool, and 
bagatelle balls, of ivory, bone, or other materials, fifty per centum ad 
valorem. 

418. Dolls, doll heads, toy marbles of whatever materials composed, 
and all other toys not composed of rubber, china, porcelain, parian, 
bisque, earthen or stone ware, and not specially provided for in this 
Act, thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 

410. Emery grains, and emery manufactured, ground, pulverized, or 
refined, one cent per pound; emery wheels, emery files, and manufac¬ 
tures of which emery is the component material of chief value, twenty- 
five per centum ad valorem. 

Explosive Substances: 

420. Firecrackers of all kinds, eight cents per pound, the weight to 

include all coverings, wrappings, and packing material. 

421. Fulminates, fulminating powders, and like articles, not specially 

provided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 

422. Gunpowder, and all explosive substances used for mining, blast¬ 

ing, artillery, or sporting purposes, when valued at twenty 
cents or less per pound, four cents per pound; valued above 
twenty cents per pound, six cents per pound. 

423. Matches, friction or lucifer, of all descriptions, per gross of 

one hundred and forty-four boxes, containing not more than 
one hundred matches per box, eight cents per gross; when 
imported otherwise than in boxes containing not more than 
one hundred matches each, one cent per one thousand matches. 
* 424. Percussion caps, thirty per centum ad valorem; cartridges, 
thirty-five per centum ad valorem; blasting caps, two dollars 
and thirty six cents per one thousand caps. 

425. Feathers and downs of all kinds, including bird skins or parts 
thereof with the feathers on, crude or not dressed, colored, or otherwise 
advanced or manufactured in any manner, not specially provided for 
in this Act, fifteen per centum ad valorem; when dressed, colored, or 
otherwise advanced or manufactured in any manner, including quilts 
of down and other manufactures of down, and also dressed and finished 
birds suitable for millinery ornaments, and artificial or ornamental 
feathers, fruits, grains, leaves, flowers, and stems or parts thereof, of 
whatever material composed, not specially provided for in this Act, 
fifty per centum ad valorem. 

426. Furs, dressed on the skin but not made up into articles, and 
furs not on the skin, prepared for hatters’ use, including fur skins car- 
roted, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

427. Fans of all kinds, except common palm-leaf fans, fifty per centum 
ad valorem. 

428. Gun wads of all descriptions, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

429. Hair, human, if clean or drawn but not manufactured, twenty 
per centum ad valorem. 

430. Hair, curled, suitable for beds or mattresses, ten per centum ad 
valorem. 


52 


431. Haircloth, known as “crinoline” cloth, ten cents per square 
yard; haircloth, known as “hair seating,” and hair press cloth, twenty 
cents per square yard. 

432. Hats, bonnets, or hoods, for men’s, women’s, boys’, or children’s 
wear, trimmed or untrimmed, including bodies, hoods, plateaux, forms, 
or shapes, for hats or bonnets, composed wholly or in chief valuepf fur 
of the rabbit, beaver, or other animals, valued at not more than five 
dollars per dozen, two dollars per dozen; valued at more than live dol¬ 
lars per dozen and not more than ten dollars per dozen, three dollars 
per dozen; valued at more than ten dollars per dozen and not more 
than twenty dollars per dozen, live dollars per dozen; valued at more 
than twenty dollars per dozen, seven dollars per dozen; and in addition 
thereto on all the foregoiug, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

433. Indurated liber ware and manufactures of wood or other pulp, 
and not otherwise specially provided for, thirty-live per centum ad 
valorem. 

Jewelry and Precious Stones: 

434. Articles commonly known as jewelry, and parts thereof, finished 

or unfinished, not specially provided for in this Act, including 
precious ctones set, pearls set or strung, and cameos in frames, 
sixty per centum ad valorem. 

435. Diamonds and other precious stones advanced in condition or 

value from their natural state by cleaving, splitting, cutting, 
or other process, and not set, ten per centum ad valorem; imi¬ 
tations of diamonds or other precious stones, composed of 
glass or paste, not exceeding an inch in dimensions, not 
engraved, painted, or otherwise ornamented or decorated, and 
not mounted or set, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

436. Pearls in their natural state, not strung or set, ten per centum 

ad valorem. 

Leather, and Manufactures of : 

437. Hides of cattle, raw or uncured, whether dry, salted, or pickled, 

fifteen per centum ad valorem: Provided, That upon all leather 
exported, made from imported hides, there shall be allowed a 
drawback equal to the amount of duty paid on such hides, to 
be paid under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury 
may prescribe. 

438. Band or belting leather, sole leather, dressed upper and all 

other leather, calfskins tanned or tanned and dressed, kan¬ 
garoo, sheep and goat skins (including lamb and kid skins) 
dressed and finished, chamois and other skins and book¬ 
binders’ calfskins, all the foregoing not specially provided for in 
this Act, twenty per centum ad valorem; skins for morocco, 
tanned but unfinished, ten per centum ad valorem; patent, 
japanned, varnished or enameled leather, weighing not over 
ten pounds per dozen hides or skins, thirty cents per pound 
and twenty per centum ad valorem; if weighing over ten pounds 
and not over twenty-five pounds per dozen, thirty cents per 
pound and ten per centum ad valorem; if weighing over twenty- 
five pounds per dozen, twenty cents per pound and ten per 
centum ad valorem; pianoforte leather and pianoforte action 
leather, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; leather shoe laces, 
finished or unfinished, fifty cents per gross pairs and twenty 
per centum ad valorem; boots and shoes made of leather, 


*53 


twenty-five per centum ad valorem: Provided , That leather 
cut into shoe uppers or vamps or other forms, suitable for 
conversion into manufactured articles, shall be classified as 
manufactures of leather and pay duty accordingly. 

Gloves— 

431). Gloves made wholly or in part of leather, whether wholly or 
partly manufactured, shall pay duty at the following rates, the 
lengths stated in each case being the extreme length when 
stretched to their full extent, namely: 

440. Women’s or children’s u glace” finish, Schmaschen (of sheep 

origin), not over fourteen inches in length, one dollar and 
seventy-live cents per dozen pairs; over fourteen inches and 
not over seventeen inches in length, two dollars and twenty- 
five cents per dozen pairs; over seventeen inches in length, 
two dollars and seventy-five cents per dozen pairs; men’s 
u glace” finish, Schmaschen (sheep), three dollars per dozen 
pairs. 

441. Women’s or children’s “ glace” finish, lamb or sheep, not over 

fourteen inches in length, two dollars and fifty cents per dozen 
pairs; over fourteen and not over seventeen inches in length, 
three dollars and fifty cents per dozen pairs; over seventeen 
inches in length, fonr dollars and fifty cents per dozen pairs; 
men’s “ glace” finish, lamb or sheep, four dollars per dozen 
pairs. 

442. Women’s or children’s “glace” finish, goat, kid, or other leather 

than of sheep origin, not over fourteen inches in length, three 
dollars per dozen pairs; over fourteen and not over seventeen 
inches in length, three dollars and seventy-five cents per dozen 
pairs: over seventeen inches in length,four dollars and seventy' 
five cents per dozen pairs; men’s “glace” finish, kid, goat, oi 
other leather than of sheep origin, four dollars x>er dozen pairs. 

443. Women’s or children’s, of sheep origin, with exterior grain sur¬ 

face removed, by whatever name known, not over seventeen 
inches in length, two dollars and fifty cents per dozen pairs; 
over seventeen inches in length, three dollars and fifty cents 
per dozen pairs; men’s, of sheep origin, with exterior surface 
removed, by whatever name known, four dollars per dozen 
pairs. 

444. Women’s or children’s kid, goat, or other leather than of sheep 

origin, with exterior grain surface removed, by whatever name 
known, not over fourteen inches in length, three dollars per 
dozen pairs; over fourteen inches and not over seventeen 
inches in length, three dollars and seventy-five cents per dozen 
pairs; overseventeen inches in length, four dollars and seventy- 
fiv© cents per dozen pairs; men’s, goat, kid, or other leather 
than of sheep origin, with exterior grain surface removed, by 
whatever name known, four dollars per dozen pairs. 

445. In addition to the foregoing rates there shall be paid the follow¬ 

ing cumulative duties: On all leather gloves, when lined, one 
dollar per dozen pairs; on all pique or prix seam gloves, forty 
cents per dozen pairs; on all gloves stitched or embroidered, 
with more than three single strands or cords, forty cents per 
dozen pairs. 

446. Glove tranks, with or without the usual accompanying pieces, 

shall pay seventy live per centum of the duty provided forth© 
gloves in the fabrication of which they are suitable. 


54 


447. Harness, saddles and saddlery, or parts of either, in sets or in 

parts, fiuished or unfinished, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 

Miscellaneous Manufactures : 

448. Manufactures of amber, asbestos, bladders, cork, catgut or whip 

gut or worm gut, or wax, or of which these substances or either 
of them is the component material of chief value, not specially 
provided for in this Act, twenty-five tier centum ad valorem. 

449. Manufactures of bone, chip, grass, horn, india-rubber, palm leaf, 

straw, weeds, or whalebone, or of which these substances or 
either of them is the component material of chief value, not 
specially provided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valo¬ 
rem; but the terms “grass” and u straw” shall be understood 
to mean these substances in their natural form and structure, 
and not the separated fiber thereof. 

450. Manufactures of leather, fiuished or unfinished, manufactures of 

fur, gelatin, gutta-percha, human hair, ivory, vegetable ivory, 
mother-of-pearl and shell, plaster of paris, papier mache, and 
vulcanized india-rubber known as “hard rubber,” or of which 
these substances or either of them is the component material 
of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, and shells 
engraved, cut, ornamented, or otherwise manufactured, thirty- 
five per centum ad valorem. 

451. Masks, composed of paper or pulp, thirty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

452. Matting made of cocoa fiber or rattan, six cents per square yard; 
mats made of cocoa fiber or rattan, four cents per square foot. 

453. Musical instruments or parts thereof, pianoforte actions and 
parts thereof, strings for musical instruments not otherwise enumerated, 
cases for musical instruments, pitch pipes, tuning forks, tuning ham¬ 
mers, and metronomes; strings for musical instruments, composed 
wholly or in part of steel or other metal, all the foregoing, forty-five 
per centum ad valorem. 

454. Paintings in oil or water colors, pastels, pen and ink drawings, 
and statuary, not specially provided for in this Act, twenty per centum 
ad valorem; but the term “ statuary” as used in this Act shall be under¬ 
stood to include only such statuary as is cut, carved, or otherwise 
wrought by hand from a solid block or mass of marble, stone, or ala¬ 
baster, or from metal, and as is the professional production of a statuary 
or sculptor only. 

455. Peat moss, one dollar per ton. 

45G. Pencils of paper or wood filled with lead or other material, and 
pencils of lead, forty-five cents per gross and twenty-five per centum 
ad valorem; slate pencils, covered with wood, thirty-five per centum 
ad valorem; all other slate pencils, three cents per one hundred. 

457. Pencil leads not in wood, ten per centum ad valorem. 

458. Photographic dry plates or films, twenty-five per centum ad 
valorem. 

459. Pipes and smokers’ articles: Common tobacco pipes and pipe 
bowls made wholly of clay, valued at not more than forty cents per 
gross, fifteen cents per gross; other tobacco pipes and pipe bowls of 
clay, fifty cents per gross and twenty-five per centum ad valorem; 
other pipes and pipe bowls of whatever material composed, and all 
smokers’ articles whatsoever, not specially provided for in this Act, 
including cigarette books, cigarette book covers, pouches for smoking 
or chewing tobacco, and cigarette paper in all forms, sixty per centum 
ad valorem. 


55 


460. Plows, tooth and disk harrows, harvesters, reapers, agricultural 
drills, and planters, mowers, horserakes, cultivators, threshing machines 
and cotton gins, twenty per centum ad valorem. 

401. Plush, black, known commercially as hatters’ plush, composed 
of silk, or of silk and cotton, such as is used exclusively for making 
men’s hats, ten per centum ad valorem. 

462. Umbrellas, parasols, and sun shades covered with material other 
than paper, fifty per centum ad valorem. Sticks for umbrellas, parasols, 
or sun shades, and walking canes, finished or unfinished, forty per 
centum ad valorem. 

463. Waste, not specially provided for in this Act, ten per centum ad 
valorem. 


Free List. 

Sec. 2. That on and after the passage of this Act, unless otherwise 
specially provided for in this Act, the following articles when imported 
shall be exempt from duty: 

464. Acids: Arsenic or arsenious, benzoic, carbolic, fluoric, hydro¬ 
chloric or muriatic, nitric, oxalic, phosphoric, phthalic, picric or nitro- 
picric, prussic, silicic, and valerianic. 

465. Aconite. 

466. Acorns, raw, dried or undried, but unground. 

467. Agates, unmanufactured. 

468. Albumen, not specially provided for. 

469. Alizarin, natural or artificial, and dyes derived from alizarin or 
from anthracin. 

470. Amber, and amberoid unmanufactured, or crude gum. 

471. Ambergris. 

472. Aniline salts. 

473. Any animal imported* specially for breeding purposes shall be 
admitted free: Provided , That no such animal shall be admitted free 
unless pure bred of a recognized breed, and duly registered in the book 
of record established for that breed: And provided f urther , That certifi¬ 
cate of such record and of the pedigree of such animal shall be pro¬ 
duced and submitted to the customs officer, duly authenticated by the 
proper custodian of such book of record, together with the affidavit of 
the owner, agent, or importer that such animal is the identical animal 
described in said certificate of record and pedigree: And provided 
further , That the Secretary of Agriculture shall determine and certify 
to the Secretary of the Treasury what are recognized breeds and pure 
bred animals under the provisions of this paragraph. The Secretary 
of the Treasury may prescribe such additional regulations as may be 
required for the strict enforcement of this provision. Cattle, horses, 
sheep, or other domestic animals straying across the boundary line into 
any foreign country, or driven across such boundary line by the owner 
for temporary pasturage purposes only, together with their offspring, 
may be brought back to the United States within six months free of 
duty, under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the 
Treasury. 

474. Animals brought into the United States temporarily for a period 
not exceeding six months, for the purpose of exhibition or competition 
for prizes offered by any agricultural or racing association; but a bond 
shall be given in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secre¬ 
tary of the Treasury; also teams of animals, including their harness 
and tackle and the wagons or other vehicles actually owned by persons 


56 


emigrating from foreign countries to the United States with their fam¬ 
ilies, and in actual use for the purpose of such emigration under such 
regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe; and wild 
animals intended for exhibition in zoological collections for scientific 
and educational purposes, and not for sale or profit. 

475. Annatto, roucou, rocoa, or Orleans, and all extracts of. 

476. Antimony ore, crude sulphite of. 

477. Apatite. 

478. Arrowroot in its natural state and not manufactured. 

479. Arsenic and sulphide of, or orpiment. 

480. Arseniate of aniline. 

481. Art educational stops, composed of glass and metal and valued 
at not more than six cents per gross. 

482. Articles in a crude state used in dyeing or tanning not specially 
provided for in this Act. 

485. Articles the growth, produce, and manufacture of the United 
States, when returned after having been exported, without having been 
advanced in value or improved in condition by any process of manu¬ 
facture or other means; casks, barrels, carboys, bags, and other vessels 
of American manufacture exported filled with American products, or 
exported empty and returned filled with foreign products, including 
shooks and staves when returned as barrels or boxes; also quicksilver 
flasks or bottles, of either domestic or foreign manufacture, which shall 
have been actually exported from the United States; but proof of the 
identity of such articles shall be made, under general regulations to be 
prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury, but the exemption of bags 
from duty shall apply only to such domestic bags as may be imported 
by the exporter thereof, and if any such articles are subject to internal 
tax at the time of exportation, such tax shall be proved to have been 
paid before exportation and not -refunded: Provided, That this para¬ 
graph .shall not apply to any article upon which an allowance of draw¬ 
back has been made, the reimportation of which is hereby prohibited 
except upon payment of duties equal to the drawbacks allowed; or to 
any article manufactured in bonded warehouse and exported under any 
provision of law: And provided further , That when manufactured 
tobacco which has been exported without payment of internal revenue 
tax shall be reimported it shall be retained in the custody of the col¬ 
lector of customs until internal-revenue stamps in payment of the legal 
duties shall be placed thereon. 

484. Asbestos, unmanufactured. 

485. Ashes, wood and lye of, and beet root ashes. 

486. Asafetida. 

487. Balm of Gilead. 

488. Barks, cinchona or other from which quinine may be extracted. 

489. Baryta, carbonate of, or witherite. 

490. Beeswax. 

491. Binding twine: All binding twine manufactured from New Zea¬ 
land hemp, is tie or Tampico fiber, sisal grass, or sunn, or a mixture of 
any two or more of them, of single ply and measuring not exceeding- 
six hundred feet to the pound: Provided , That articles mentioned in 
this paragraph if imported from a country which lays an import duty 
on like articles imported from the United States, shall be subject to a 
duty of one-half of one cent per pound. 

492. Bells, broken, and bell metal broken and fit only to be remanu¬ 
factured. 

493. Birds, stuffed, not suitable for millinery ornaments. 


57 


494. Birds and land and water fowls. 

495. Bismuth. 

496. Bladders, and all integuments and intestines of animals and 
fish sounds, crude, dried or salted for preservation only, and unmanu¬ 
factured, not specially provided for in this Act. 

497. Blood, dried, not specially provided for. 

498. Bolting cloths composed of silk, imported expressly for milling 
purposes, and so permanently marked as not to be available for any 
other use. 

499. Bones, crude* or not burned, calcined, ground, steamed, or other¬ 
wise manufactured, and bone dust or animal carbon, and bone ash, fit 
only for fertilizing purposes. 

500. Books, engravings, photographs, etchings, bound or unbound, 
maps and charts imported by authority or for the use of the United 
States or for the use of the Library of Congress. 

501. Books, maps, music, engravings, photographs, etchings, bound 
or unbound, and charts, which shall have been printed more than twenty 
years at the date of importation, and all hydrographic charts, and pub¬ 
lications issued for their subscribers or exchanges by scientific and 
literary associations or academies, or publications of individuals for 
gratuitous private circulation, and public documents issued by foreign 
Governments. 

502. Books and pamphlets printed exclusively in languages other 
than English; also books and music, in raised print, used exclusively 
by the blind. 

503. Books, maps, music, photographs, etchings, lithographic prints, 
and charts, specially imported, not more than two copies in any one 
invoice, in good faith, for the use or by order of any society or institu¬ 
tion incorporated or established solely for religious, philosophical, edu¬ 
cational, scientific, or literary purposes, or for the encouragement of 
the fine arts, or for the use or by order of any college, academy, school, 
or seminary of learning in the United States, or any State or public 
library, and not for sale, subject to such regulations as the Secretary of 
the Treasury shall prescribe. 

504. Books, libraries, usual and reasonable furniture, and similar 
household effects of persons or families from foreign countries, all the 
foregoing if actually used abroad by them not less than one year, and 
not intended for any other person or persons, nor for sale. 

505. Brass, old brass, clippings from brass or Dutch metal, all tlie 
foregoing, fit only for remanufacture. 

500. Brazil paste. 

507. Brazilian pebble, unwrought or unmanufactured. 

508. Breccia, in block or slabs. 

509. Bristles, crude, not sorted, bunched, or prepared. 

510. Broom corn. 

511. Bullion, gold or silver. 

512. Burgundy pitch. 

513. Cadmium. 

514. Calamine. 

515. Camphor, crude. 

510. Castor or castoreum. 

517. Cat gut, whip gut, or worm gut, unmanufactured. 

518. Cerium. 

519. Chalk, crude, not ground, precipitated, or otherwise manufac¬ 
tured. 

520. Chromate of iron or chromic ore. 


58 


521. Civet, crude. 

522. Clay: Common blue clay in casks suitable for the manufacture 
of crucibles. 

523. Coal, anthracite, not specially provided for in this Act, and coal 
stores of American vessels, but none shall be unloaded. 

524. Coal tar, crude, pitch of coal tar, and products of coal tar known 
as dead or creosote oil, benzol, toluol, naphthalin, xylol, phenol, cresol, 
toluidine, xylidin, cumidin, binitrotoluol, binitrobenzol, benzidin, 
tolidin, dianisidin, naphtol, naphtylamin, diphenylamin, benzaldehyde, 
benzyl chloride, resorcin, nitro-benzol, and nitro-toluol; all the fore¬ 
going not medicinal and not colors or dyes. 

525. Cobalt and cobalt ore. 

526. Cocculus indicus. 

527. Cochineal. 

528. Cocoa, or cacao, crude, and fiber, leaves, and shells of. 

529. Coffee. 

530. Coins, gold, silver, and copper. 

531. Coir, and coir yarn. 

532. Copper in plates, bars, ingots, or pigs, and other forms, not 
manufactured or specially provided for in this Act. 

533. Old copper, tit only for manufacture, clipping from new copper, 
and all composition metal of which copper is a component material of 
chief value not specially provided for in this Act. 

534. Copper, regulus of, and black or coarse copper, and copper 
cement. 

535. Coral, marine, uncut, and unmanufactured. 

536. Cork wood, or cork bark, unmanufactured. 

537. Cotton, and cotton waste or Hocks. 

538. Cryolite, or kryolitli. 

539. Cudbear. 

540. Curling stones, or quoits, and curling-stone handles. 

541. Curry, and curry powder. 

542. Cutch. 

543. Cuttlefish bone. 

544. Dandelion roots, raw, dried, or undried, but unground. 

545. Diamonds and other precious stones, rough, or uncut, and not 
advanced in condition or value from their natural state by cleaving, 
splitting, cutting, or other process, including miners’, glaziers’ and 
engravers’ diamonds not set, and diamond dust or bort. 

546. Divi-divi. 

547. Dragon’s blood. 

548. Drugs, such as barks, beans, berries, balsams, buds, bulbs, and 
bulbous roots, excrescences, fruits, flowers, dried fibers, and dried 
insects, grains, gums, and gum resin, herbs, leaves, lichens, mosses, 
nuts, nutgalls, roots, and stems, spices, vegetables, seeds aromatic, and 
seeds of morbid growth, weeds, and woods used expressly for dyeing; 
any of the foregoing which are drugs and not edible and are in a crude 
state, and not advanced in value or condition by refining or grinding, 
or by other process, and not specially provided for in this Act. 

549. Eggs of birds, fish, and insects: Provided , however , That this 
shall not be held to include the eggs of game birds or eggs of birds not 
used for food, the importation of which is prohibited except specimens 
for scientific collections, nor fish roe preserved for food purposes. 

550. Emery ore. 

551. Ergot. 

552. Fans, common palm-leaf, plain and not ornamented or decorated 


59 


in any manner, and palm leaf in its natural state, not colored, dyed, or 
otherwise advanced or manufactured. 

553. Felt, adhesive, for sheathing vessels. 

554. Fibrin, in all forms. 

555. Fish, fresh, frozen, or packed in ice, caught in the Great Lakes 
or other fresh waters by citizens of the United States. 

55G. Fish skins. 

•557. Flint, hints, and flint stones, unground. 

558. Fossils. 

559. Fruits or berries, green, ripe, or dried, and fruits in brine, not 
specially provided for in this Act. 

500. Fruit plants, tropical and semitropical, for the purpose of prop¬ 
agation or cultivation. 

5G1. Furs, undressed. 

5G2. Fur skins of all kinds not dressed in any manner and not 
specially provided for in this Act. 

5G3. Gambier. 

5G4. Glass enamel, white, for watch and clock dials. 

565. Glass plates or discs, rough-cut or unwrought, for use in the 
manufacture <*f optical instruments, spectacles, and eye glasses, and 
suitable only for such use: Provided , however , That such discs exceed¬ 
ing eight inches in diameter may be polished sufficiently to enable the 
character of the glass to be determined. 

5GG. Grasses and fibers: Istle or Tampico fiber, jute, jute butts, 
manila, sisal grass, sunn, and all other textile grasses or fibrous vege¬ 
table substances, not dressed or manufactured in any manner, and not 
specially provided for in this Act. 

567. Gold-beaters’ molds and gold-beaters’ skins. 

568. Grease, and oils (excepting fish oils), such as are commonly used 
in soap making or in wire drawing, or for stuffing or dressing leather, 
and which are fit only for such uses, and not specially provided for in 
this Act. 

569. Guano, manures, and all substances used only for manure. 

570. Gutta percha, crude. 

571. Hair of horse, cattle, and other animals, cleaned or uncleaned, 
drawn or undrawn, but unmanufactured, not specially provided for in 
this Act; and human hair, raw, uncleaned, and not drawn. 

572. Hide cuttings, raw, with or without hair, and all other glue stock. 

573. Hide rope. 

574. Hones and whetstones. 

575. Hoofs, unmanufactured. 

576. Hop roots for cultivation. 

577. Horns and parts of, unmanufactured, including horn strips and 
tips. 

578. Ice. 

579. India rubber, crude, and milk of, and old scrap or refuse India 
rubber which has been worn out by use and is fit only for remanufacture. 

580. Indigo. 

581. Iodine, crude. 

582. Ipecac. 

583. Iridium. 

584. Ivory tusks in their natural state or cut vertically across the 
grain only, with the bark left intact, and vegetable ivory in its natural 
state. 

585. Jalap. 

586. Jet, unmanufactured. 


60 


587. Joss stick, or Joss light. 

588. Junk, old. 

589. Kelp. 

590. Kieserite. 

591. Kyanite, or cyanite, and kainite. 

592. Lac dye, crude, seed, button, stick, and shell. 

593. Lac spirits. 

594. Lactarene. 

595. Lava, unmanufactured. 

596. Leeches. 

597. Lemon juice, lime juice, and sour orange juice. 

598. Licorice root, unground. 

599. Lifeboats and life-saving apparatus specially imported by socie¬ 
ties incorporated or established to encourage the saving of human life. 

600. Lime, citrate of. 

601. Lithographic stones, not engraved. 

602. Litmus, prepared or not prepared. 

603. Loadstones. 

604. Madder and munjeet, or Indian madder, ground or prepared, 

and all extracts of. • 

605. Magnesite, crude or calcined, not purified. 

606. Magnesium, not made up into articles. 

607. Manganese, oxide and ore of. 

608. Manna. 

609. Manuscripts. 

610. Marrow, crude. 

611. Marshmallow or althea root, leaves or flowers, natural or unman¬ 
ufactured. 

612. Medals of gold, silver, or copper, and other metallic articles 
actually bestowed as trophies or prizes, and received and accepted as 
honorary distinctions. 

613. Meerschaum, crude or unmanufactured. 

614. Minerals, crude, oi^not advanced in value or condition by refin¬ 
ing or grinding, or by other process of manufacture, not specially pro¬ 
vided for in this Act. 

615. Mineral salts obtained by evaporation from mineral waters, 
when accompanied by a duly authenticated certificate and satisfactory 
proof, showing that they are in no way artificially prepared, and are 
only the product of a designated mineral spring. 

616. Models of inventions and of other improvements in the arts, 
including patterns for machinery, but no article shall be deemed a 
model or pattern which can be fitted for use otherwise. 

617. Moss, seaweeds, and vegetable substances, crude or unmanufac¬ 
tured, not otherwise specially provided for in this Act. 

618. Musk, crude, in natural pods. 

619. Myrobolans. 

620. Needles, hand sewing, and darning. 

621. Newspapers and periodicals; but the term “periodicals” as 
herein used shall be understood to embrace only unbound or paper- 
covered publications, issued within six mouths of the time of entry, 
containing current literature of the day and issued regularly at stated 
periods, as weekly, monthly, or quarterly. 

622. Nuts: Brazil nuts, cream nuts, palm nuts and palm-nut kernels; 
cocoanutsin tlie shell and broken cocoanut meat or copra, not shredded, 
desiccated, or prepared in any manner. 

623. Nux vomica. 


61 


624. Oakum. 

625. Oil cake. 

626. Oils: Almond, amber, crude and rectified ambergris, anise or 
anise seed, aniline, aspic or spike lavender, bergamot, cajeput, cara¬ 
way, cassia, cinnamon, cedrat, chamomile, citronella or lemon grass, 
civet, cocoanut, fennel, ichthyol, jasmine or jasimine, juglandinm, juni¬ 
per, lavender, lemon, limes, mace, neroli or orange flower, enfleurage 
grease, nut oil or oil of nuts not otherwise specially provided for in this 
Act, orange oil, olive oil for manufacturing or mechanical purposes fit 
only for such use and valued at not more than sixty cents per gallon, 
ottar of roses, palm, rosemary or anthoss, sesame or sesamum seed or 
bean, thyme, origanum red or white, valerian; and also spermaceti, 
whale, and other fish oils of American fisheries, and all fish and other 
products, of such fisheries; petroleum, crude or refined: Provided , That 
it* there be imported into the United States crude petroleum, or the 
products of crude petroleum produced in any country which imposes a 
duty on petroleum or its products exported from the United States, 
there shall in such cases be levied, paid, and collected a duty upon said 
crude petroleum or its products so imported equal to the duty imposed 
by such country. 

627. Orange and lemon peel, not preserved, candied, or dried. 

628. Orchil, or orchil liquid. 

629. Ores of gold, silver, copper, or nickel, and nickel matte; sweep¬ 
ings of gold and silver. 

630. Osmium. 

631. Palladium. 

632. Paper stock, crude, of every description, including all grasses, 
fibers, rags (other than wool), waste, including jute waste, shavings, 
clippings, old paper, rope ends, waste rape, and waste baggingjinclud- 
ing old gunny cloth and old gunny bags, fit only to be converted into 
paper. 

633. Paraffin. 

634. Parchment and vellum. 

635. Pearl, mother of, and shells, not sawed, cut, polished or other¬ 
wise manufactured, or advanced in value from the natural state. 

636. Personal effects, not merchandise, of citizens of the United 
States dying in foreign countries. 

637. Pewter and britannia metal, old, and fit only to be remanufac¬ 
tured. 

' 638. Philosophical and scientific apparatus, utensils, instruments, 
and preparations, including bottles and boxes containing the same, 
specially imported in good faith for the use and by order of any society 
or institution incorporated or established solely for religious, philosoph¬ 
ical, educational, scientific, or literary purposes, or for the encourage¬ 
ment of the fine arts, or for the use or by order of any college, academy, 
school, or seminary of learning in the United States, or any State or 
public library, and not for sale, subject to such regulations as the Sec¬ 
retary of the Treasury shall prescribe. 

639. Phosphates, crude. 

640. Plants, trees, shrubs, roots, seed-cane, and seeds, imported by 
the Department of Agriculture or the United States Botanic Garden. 

641. Platina, in ingots, bars, sheets, and wire. 

642. Platinum, unmanufactured, and vases, retorts, and other appa¬ 
ratus, vessels, and parts thereof composed of platinum, for chemical 
uses. 

643. Plumbago. 


62 


644. Potash, crude, or u black salts”; carbonate of potash, crude or 
refined; hydrate of, or caustic potash, not including refined in sticks 
or rolls ; nitrate of potash or saltpeter, crude; sulphate of potash, crude 
or refined, and muriate of potash. . 

045. Professional books, implements, instruments, and tools of trade, 
occupation, or employment, in the actual possession at the time, of per¬ 
sons emigrating to the United States; but this exemption shall not be 
construed to include machinery or other articles imported for use in any 
manufacturing establishment, or for any other person or persons, or for 
sale, nor shall it be construed to include theatrical scenery, properties, 
and apparel; but such articles brought by proprietors or managers of 
theatrical exhibitions arriving from abroad, for temporary use by them 
in such exhibitions, and not for any other person, and not for sale, and 
which have been used by them abroad, shall be admitted free of duty 
under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe; 
but bonds shall be given for the payment to the United States of such 
duties as may be imposed by law upon any and all such articles as shall 
not be exported within six months after such importation: Provided , 
That the Secretary of the Treasury may in his discretion extend such 
period for a further term of six months in case application shall be made 
therefor. 

646. Pulu. 

647. Quinia, sulphate of, and all alkaloids or salts of cinchona bark. 

648. flags, not otherwise specially provided for in this Act. 

649. Regalia and gems, statuary, and specimens or casts of sculpture, 
where specially imported in good faith for the use and by order of any 
society incorporated or established solely for religious, philosophical, 
educational, scientific, or literary purposes, or for the encouragement 
of the fine arts, or for the use and by order of any college, academy, 
school, or seminary of learning in the United States, or any State or 
public library, and not for sale; but the term “regalia” as herein used 
shall bo held to embrace only such insignia of rank or office or emblems 
as may be worn upon the person or borne in the hand during public 
exercises of the society or institution, and shall not include articles of 
furniture or fixtures, or of regular wearing apparel, nor personal prop¬ 
erty of individuals. 

650. Rennets, raw or prepared. 

651. Saffron and safflower, and extract of, and saffron cake. 

652. Sago, crude. 

655. Salacin. 

654. Salep, or Salop. 

655. Sausages, bologna. 

656. Seeds: Anise, caraway, cardamom,cauliflower, coriander, cotton, 
cummin, fennel, fenugreek, hemp, hoarhound, mangel-wurzel, mustard, 
rape, Saiut John’s bread or bean, sugar beet, sorghum or sugar cane 
for seed; bulbs and bulbous roots, not edible and not otherwise pro¬ 
vided for; all flower and grass seeds; all the foregoing not specially 
provided for in this Act. 

657. Sheep dip, not including compounds or preparations that can 
be used for other purposes. 

658. Shotgun barrels, in single tubes, forged, rough bored. 

659. Shrimps and other shell fish. 

660. Silk, raw, or as reeled from the cocoon, but not doubled, twisted, 
or advanced in manufacture in any way. 

661. Silk cocoons and silk waste. 

662. Silkworm’s eggs. 


663. Skeletons and other preparations of anatomy. 

064. Skins of all kinds, raw (except sheepskins with the wool on), 
and hides not specially provided for in this Act. 

005. Soda, nitrate of, or cubic nitrate. 

600. Specimens of natural history, botany, and mineralogy, when 
imported for scientific public collections, and not for sale. 

067. Spices: Cassia, cassia vera, and cassia buds; cinnamon and 
chips of; cloves and clove stems; mace; nutmegs; pepper, black or 
white, and pimento; all the foregoing when unground; ginger root, 
unground and not preserved or candied. 

008. Spunk. 

009. Spurs and stilts used in the manufacture of earthen, porcelain, 
and stone ware. 

070. Stamps; foreign postage or revenue stamps, canceled or 
uncanceled. 

071. Stone and sand: Burrstone in blocks, rough or unmanufactured; 
cliff stone, unmanufactured; rotten stone, tripoli, and sand, crude or 
manufactured, not otherwise provided for in this Act. 

072. Storax, or sty rax. 

673. Strontia, oxide of, and protoxide of strontian, and strontianite, 
or mineral carbonate of strontia. 

674. Sulphur, lac or precipitated, and sulx>hur or brimstone, crude, in 
bulk, sulphur ore as pyrites, or sulphuret of iron in its natural state, 
containing in excess of twenty-five per centum of sulphur, and sulphur 
not otherwise provided for. 

675. Sulphuric acid which at the temperature of sixty degrees Fah¬ 
renheit does not exceed the specific gravity of one and three hundred 
and eighty thousandths, for use in manufacturing superphosphate of 
lime or artificial manures of any kind, or for any agricultural purposes: 
Provided , That upon all sulphuric acid imported from any country, 
whether independent or a dependency, which imposes a duty upon sul¬ 
phuric acid imported into such country from the United States, there 
shall be levied and collected a duty of one-fourth of one cent per 
pound. 

676. Tamarinds. 

677. Tapioca, cassava or cassady. 

678. Tar and pitch of wood. 

679. Tea and tea plants. 

680. Teeth, natural, or unmanufactured. 

081. Terra alba, not made from gypsum or plaster rock. 

682. Terra /japonica. 

683. Tin ore, cassiterite or black oxide of tin, and tin in bars, blocks, 
pigs, or grain or granulated. 

084. Tobacco stems. 

685. Tonquin, tonqua, or tonka beans. 

686. Turmeric. 

687. Turpentine, Venice. 

688. Turpentine, spirits of. 

689. Turtles. 

690. Types, old, and fit only to be remanufactured. 

691. Uranium, oxide and salts of. 

692. Vaccine virus. 

693. Valonia. 

694. Verdigris, or subacetate of copper. 

695. Wax, vegetable or mineral. 

696. Wafers, unleavened or not edible. 


64 


697. Wearing apparel, articles of personal adornment, toilet articles, 
and similar personal effects of persons arriving in the United States; 
but this exemption shall only include such articles as actually accom¬ 
pany and are in the use of, and as are necessary and appropriate for 
the wear and use of such persons, for the immediate purposes of the 
journey and present comfort and convenience, and shall not be held to 
apply to merchandise or articles intended for other persons or for sale: 
Provided , That in case of residents of the United States returning from 
abroad, all wearing apparel and other personal effects taken by them 
out of the United States to foreign countries shall be admitted free of 
duty, without regard to their value, upon their identity being estab¬ 
lished, under appropriate rules and regulations to be prescribed by the 
Secretary of the Treasury, but no more than one hundred dollars in 
value of articles purchased abroad by such residents of the United 
States shall be admitted free of duty upon their return. 

698. Whalebone, unmanufactured. 

699. Wood: Logs and round unmanufactured timber, including pulp- 
woods, firewood, handle-bolts, shingle-bolts, gun-blocks for gun-stocks 
rough-hewn or sawed/or idaned on one side, hop-poles, ship-timber and 
ship-plankingj all the foregoing not specially provided for in this Act. 

700. Woods: Cedar, lignum-vitae, lance wood, ebony, box, granadilla, 
mahogany, rosewood, satinwood, and all forms of cabinet woods, in the 
log, rough, or hewn only; briar root or briar wood and similar wood 
unmanufactured, or not further advanced than cut into blocks suitable 
for the articles into which they are intended to be converted; bamboo, 
rattan, reeds unmanufactured, India malacca joints, and sticks of par¬ 
tridge, hair wood, pimento, orange, myrtle, and other woods not spe¬ 
cially provided for in this Act, in the rough, or not further advanced 
than cut into lengths suitable for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, sun¬ 
shades, whips, fishing rods, or walking-canes. 

701. Works of art, drawings, engravings, photographic pictures, and 
philosophical and scientific apparatus brought by professional artists, 
lecturers, or scientists arriving from abroad for use by them temporarily 
for exhibition and in illustration, promotion, and encouragement of art, 
science, or industry in the United States, and not for sale, shall be 
admitted free of duty, under such regulations as the Secretary of the 
Treasury shall prescribe; but bonds shall be given for the payment to 
the United States of such duties as may be imposed by law upon any 
and all such articles as shall not be exported within six months after 
such importation: Provided , That the Secretary of the Treasury may, 
in his discretion, extend such period for a further term of six months 
in cases where applications therefor shall be made. 

702. Works of art, collections in illustration of the progress of the 
arts, sciences, or manufactures, photographs, works in terra cotta, 
parian, pottery, or porcelain, antiquities and artistic copies thereof in 
metal or other material, imported in good faith for exhibition at a fixed 
place by any State or by any society or institution established for the 
encouragement of the arts, science, or education, or for a municipal cor¬ 
poration, and all like articles imported in good faith by any society or 
association, or for a municipal corporation for the purpose of erecting a 
public monument, and not intended for sale, nor for any other purpose 
than herein expressed; but bonds shall be given under such rules and 
regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe, for the pay¬ 
ment of lawful duties which may accrue should any of the articles afore¬ 
said be sold, transferred, or used contrary to this provision, and such 
articles shall be subject, at any time, to examination and inspection by 


65 


the proper officers of the customs: Provided, That the privileges of this 
and the preceding section shall not be allowed to associations or cor¬ 
porations engaged in or connected with business of a private or c<^i- 
mercial character. 

703. Works of art, the production of American artists residing tem¬ 
porarily abroad, or other works of art, including pictorial paintings on 
glass, imported expressly for presentation to a national institution, or 
to any State or municipal corporation, or incorporated religious society, 
college, or other public institution, except stained or painted window- 
glass or stained or painted glass windows; but such exemption shall be 
subject to such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may 
prescribe. 

704. Yams. 

705. Zaffer. 

Sec. 3. That for the purpose of equalizing the trade of the United 
States with foreign countries, and their colonies, producing and export¬ 
ing to this country the following articles: Argols, or crude tartar, or 
wine lees, crude; brandies, or other spirits manufactured or distilled 
from grain or other materials; champagne and all other sparkling 
wines; still wines, and vermuth; paintings and statuary; or any of 
them, the President be, and he is hereby, authorized, as soon as may 
be after the passage of this Act, and from time to time thereafter, to 
enter into negotiations with the governments of those countries export¬ 
ing to the United States the above-mentioned articles, or any of them, 
with a view to the arrangement of commercial agreements in which 
reciprocal and equivalent concessions may be secured in favor of the 
products and manufactures of the United States; and whenever the 
government of any country, or colony, producing and exporting to the 
United States the above mentioned articles, or any of them, shall enter 
into a commercial agreement with the United States, or make con¬ 
cessions in favor of the products, or manufactures thereof, which, in 
the judgment of the President, shall be reciprocal and equivalent, he 
shall be, and he is hereby, authorized and empowered to suspend, dur¬ 
ing the time of such agreement or concession, by proclamation to that 
effect, the imposition and collection of the duties mentioned in this 
Act, on such article or articles so exported to the United States from 
such country or colony, and thereupon and thereafter the duties levied, 
collected, and paid upon such article or articles shall be as follows, 
namely: 

Argols, or crude tartar, or wine lees, crude, five per centum ad valorem. 

Brandies, or other spirits manufactured or distilled from grain or other 
materials, one dollar and seventy-five cents per proof gallon. 

Champagne and all other sparkling wines, in bottles containing not 
more than one quart and more than one pint, six dollars per dozen; 
containing not more than one pint each and more than one-half pint, 
three dollars per dozen; containing one-half pint each or less, one dol¬ 
lar and fifty cents per dozen; in bottles or other vessels containing more 
than one quart each, in addition to six dollars per dozen bottles on the 
quantities in excess of one quart, at the rate of one dollar and ninety 
cents per gallon. 

Still wines, and vermuth, in casks, thirty-five cents per gallon; in 
bottles or jugs, per case of one dozen bottles or jugs containing each 
not more than one quart and more than one pint, or twenty-four bottles 
or jugs containing each not more than one pint, one dollar and twenty- 
five cents per case, and any excess beyond these quantities found in 
such bottles or jugs shall be subject to a duty ot four cents per pint or 

5797—02-5 



66 r 

fractional part thereof, but no separate or additional duty shall be 
assessed upon the bottles or jugs. 

^Paintings in oil or water colors, pastels, pen and ink drawings, and 
statuary, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 

The President shall have power, and it shall be his duty, whenever 
he shall be satisfied that any such agreement in this Section mentioned 
is not being fully executed by the Government with which it shall have 
been made, to revoke such suspension and notify such Government 
thereof. 

And it is further provided that with a view to secure reciprocal trade 
with countries producing the following articles, whenever and so often 
as the President shall be satisfied that the Government of any country, 
or colony of such Government, producing and exporting directly or 
indirectly to the United States coffee, tea, and tonquin, tonqua, or tonka 
beans, and vanilla beans, or any of such articles, imposes duties or 
other exactions upon the agricultural, manufactured, or other products 
of the United States, which, in view of the introduction of such coffee, 
tea, and tonquin, tonqua, or tonka beaus, and vanilla beans, into the 
United States, as in this Act hereinbefore provided for, he may deem 
to be reciprocally unequal and unreasonable, he shall have the power 
and it shall be his duty to suspend, by proclamation to that effect, the 
provisions of this Act relating to the free introduction of such coffee, 
tea, and tonquin, tonqua, or tonka beans, and vanilla beans, of the 
products of such country or colony, for such time as he shall deem just; 
and in such case and during such suspension duties shall be levied, 
collected, and paid upon coffee, tea, and tonquin, tonqua, or tonka 
beans, and vanilla beans, the products or exports, direct or indirect, 
from such designated country, as follows: 

On coffee, three cents per pound. 

On tea, ten cents per pound. 

On tonquin, tonqua, or tonka beans, fifty cents per pound; vanilla 
beans, two dollars per pound; vanilla beans, commercially known as 
cuts, one dollar per pound. 

Sec. 4. That whenever the President of the United States, by and 
with the advice and consent of the Senate, with a view to secure recip¬ 
rocal trade with foreign countries, shall, within the period of two years 
from and after the passage of this Act, enter into commercial treaty or 
treaties with any other country or countries concerning the admission 
into any such country or countries of the goods, wares, and merchan¬ 
dise of the United States and their use and disposition therein, deemed 
to be for the interests of the United States, and in such treaty or trea¬ 
ties, in consideration of the advantages accruing to the United States 
therefrom, shall provide for the reduction during a specified period, not 
exceeding five years, of the duties imposed by this Act, to the extent 
of not more than twenty per centum thereof, upon such goods, wares, 
or merchandise as may be designated therein of the country or coun¬ 
tries with which such treaty or treaties shall be made as in this section 
provided for; or shall provide for the transfer during such period from 
the dutiable list of this Act to the free list thereof of such goods, wares, 
and merchandise, being the natural products of such foreign country 
or countries and not of the United States; or shall provide for the 
retention upon the free list of this Act during a specified period, not 
exceeding five years, of such goods, wares, and merchandise now 
included in said free list as may be designated therein; and when any 
such treaty shall have been duly ratified by the Senate and approved 
by Congress, and public proclamation made accordingly, then and 


67 


thereafter the duties which shall be collected by the United States 
upon any of the designated goods, wares, and merchandise from the 
foreign country with which such treaty has been made shall, during 
the period provided for, be the duties specified and provided for in such 
treaty, and none other. 

Sec. 5. That whenever anj’ country, dependency, or colony shall pay 
or bestow, directly or indirectly, any bounty or grant upon the exporta¬ 
tion of any article or merchandise from such country, dependency, or 
colony, and such article or merchandise is dutiable under the provi¬ 
sions of this Act, then upon the importation of any such article or 
merchandise into the United States, whether the same shall be imported 
directly from the country of production or otherwise, and whether such 
article or merchandise is imported in the same condition as when ex¬ 
ported from the country ot production or has been changed in condition 
by remanufacture or otherwise, tliere shall be levied and paid, in all 
such cases, in addition to the duties otherwise imposed by this Act, an 
additional duty equal to the net amount of such bounty or grant, how¬ 
ever the same be paid or bestowed. The net amount of all such boun¬ 
ties or grants shall be from time to time ascertained, determined, and 
declared by the Secretary of the Treasury, who shall make all needful 
regulations for the identification of such articles and merchandise and 
for the assessment and collection of such additional duties. 

Sec. 0. That there shall be levied, collected, and paid on the impor¬ 
tation of all raw or unmanufactured articles, not enumerated or pro¬ 
vided for in this Act, a duty of ten per centum ad valorem, and on all 
articles manufactured, in whole or in part, not provided for in this Act, 
a duty of twenty per centum ad valorem. 

Sec. 7. That each and every imported article, not enumerated in this 
Act, which is similar, either in material, quality, texture, or the use 
to which it may be applied, to any article enumerated in this Act as 
chargeable with duty, shall pay the same rate of duty which is levied 
on the enumerated article which it most resembles in any of the par¬ 
ticulars before mentioned; and if any nonenumerated article equally 
resembles two or more enumerated articles on which different rates of 
duty are chargeable, there shall be levied on such nonenumerated arti¬ 
cle the same rate of duty as is chargeable on the article which it resem¬ 
bles paying the highest rate of duty; and on articles not enumerated, 
manufactured of two or more materials, the duty shall be assessed at 
the highest rate at which the same would be chargeable if composed 
wholly of the component material thereof of chief value; and the words 
“component material of chief value,” wherever used in this Act, shall 
be held to mean that component material which shall exceed in value 
any other single component material of the article; and the value of 
each component material shall be determined by the ascertained value 
of such material in its condition as found in the article. If two or more 
rates of duty shall be applicable to any imported article, it shall pay 
duty at the highest of such rates. 

Sec. 8. That all articles of foreign manufacture, such as are usually 
or ordinarily marked, stamped, branded, or labeled, and all packages 
containing such or other imported articles, shall, respectively, be plainly 
marked, stamped, branded, or labeled in legible English words in a 
conspicuous place, so as to indicate the country of their origin and the 
quantity of their contents; and until so marked, stamped, branded, or 
labeled they shall not be delivered to the importer. Should any 
article of imported merchandise be marked, stamped, branded, or 
labeled so as to indicate a quantity, number, or measurement in excess 


68 


of the quantity, number, or measurement actually contained in such 
article, no delivery of the same shall be made to the importer until the 
mark, stamp, brand, or label, as the case may be, shall be changed so 
as to conform to the facts of the case. 

Sec. 9. That section thirty-three hundred and forty-one of the Revised 
Statutes of the United States be, and hereby is, amended to read as 
follows: 

“Sec. 3341. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue shall cause to 
oe prepared, for the payment of such tax, suitable stamps denoting 
the amount of tax required to be paid on'the hogsheads, barrels, and 
halves, thirds, quarters, sixths, and eighths of a barrel of such fer¬ 
mented liquors (and shall also cause to be prepared suitable permits 
for the purpose hereinafter mentioned), and shall furnish the same to 
the collectors of internal revenue, who shall each be required to keep 
on hand at all times a sufficient supply of permits and a supply of 
stamps equal in amount to two months’ sales thereof, if there be any 
brewery or brewery warehouse in his district; and such stamps shall • 
be sold, and permits granted and delivered by such collectors, only to 
the brewers of their district, respectively. 

“Such collectors shall keep an account of the number of permits 
delivered and of the number and value of the stamps sold by them to 
each brewer.” 

Sec. 10. That section thirty-three hundred and ninety-four of the 
Revised Statutes of the United States, as amended, be, and the same 
is hereby, further amended, so as to read as follows: 

“ Upon cigars which shall be manufactured and sold, or removed for 
consumption or sale, there shall be assessed and collected the following 
taxes, to be paid by the manufacturer thereof: On cigars of all descrip¬ 
tions made of tobacco, or any substitute therefor, and weighing more 
than three pounds per thousand, three dollars per thousand; on cigars, 
made of tobacco, or any substitute therefor, and weighing not more 
than three pounds per thousand, one dollar per thousand; on ciga¬ 
rettes, made of tobacco, or any substitute therefor, and weighing more 
than three pounds per thousand, three dollars per thousand; on ciga¬ 
rettes, made of tobacco, or any substitute therefor, and weighing not 
more than three pounds per thousand, one dollar per thousand: Pro¬ 
vided , That all rolls of tobacco, or any substitute therefor, wrapped 
with tobacco, shall be classed as cigars, and all rolls of tobacco, or any 
substitute therefor, wrapped in paper or any substance other than 
tobacco, shall be classed as cigarettes. 

“And the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, with the approval of 
the Secretary of the Treasury, shall provide dies and adhesive stamps 
for cigars weighing not more than three pounds per thousand: Provided , 
That such stamps shall be in denominations of ten, twenty, fifty, and 
one hundred, and the laws and regulations governing the packing and 
removal for sale of cigarettes, and the affixing aud canceling of the 
stamps on the packages thereof, shall apply to cigars weighing not 
more than three pounds per thousand. 

“None of the packages of smoking tobacco and fine-cut chewing 
tobacco and cigarettes prescribed by law shall be permitted to have 
packed in, or attached to, or connected with, them, any article or thing 
whatsoever, other than the manufacturers’ wrappers and labels, the 
internal revenue stamp and the tobacco or cigarettes, respectively, put 
up therein, on which tax is required to be paid under the internal rev¬ 
enue laws; nor shall there be affixed to, or branded, stamped, marked, 
written, or printed upon, said packages, or their contents, any promise 


69 

or offer of, or any order or certificate for, any gift, prize, premium, 
payment, or reward.” 

Sec. 11. That no article of imported merchandise which shall copy or 
simulate the name or trade-mark of any domestic manufacture or man¬ 
ufacturer. or which shall bear a name or mark, which is calculated to 
induce the public to believe that the article is manufactured in the 
United States, shall be admitted to entry at any custom-house of the 
United States. And in order to aid the officers of the customs in enforc¬ 
ing this prohibition, any domestic manufacturer who has adopted trade¬ 
marks-may require his name and residence and a description of his 
trade-marks to be recorded in books which shall be kept for that pur¬ 
pose in the Department of the Treasury, under such regulations as the 
Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe, and may furnish to the 
Department facsimiles of such trade marks; and thereupon the Secre¬ 
tary of the Treasury shall cause one or more copies of the same to be 
transmitted to each collector or other proper officer of the customs. 

Sec. 12. That all materials of foreign production which may be neces¬ 
sary for the construction of vessels built in the United States for foreign 
account and ownership, or for the purpose of being employed in the 
foreign trade, including the trade between the Atlantic and Pacific 
ports of the United States, and all such materials necessary for the 
building of their machinery, and all articles necessary for their outfit 
and equipment, may be imported in bond under such regulations as the 
Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe; and upon proof that such 
materials have been used for such purposes no duties shall be paid 
thereon. But vessels receiving the benefit of this section shall not be 
allowed to engage in the coastwise trade of the United States more 
than two months in any one year except upon the payment to the 
United States of the duties of which a rebate is herein allowed: Pro¬ 
vided , That vessels built in the United States for foreign account and 
ownership shall not be allowed to engage in the coastwise trade of the 
United States. 

Sec. 13. That all articles of foreign production needed for the repair 
of American vessels engaged in foreign trade, including the trade between 
the Atlantic and Pacific ports of the United States, may be withdrawn 
from bonded warehouses free of duty, under such regulations as the 
Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. 

Sec. 14. That the sixteenth section of an Act entitled “An Act to 
remove certain burdens on the American merchant marine and encour¬ 
age the American foreign carrying trade, and for other purposes,” 
approved June twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, be 
amended so as to read as follows : 

“Sec. 16. That all articles of foreign or domestic production needed 
and actually withdrawn from bonded warehouses and bonded manu¬ 
facturing warehouses for supplies (not including equipment) of vessels 
of the United States engaged in foreign trade, or in trade between the 
Atlantic and Pacific ports of the United States, may be so withdrawn 
from said bonded warehouses, free of duty or of internal-revenue tax, 
as the case may be, under such regulations as the Secretary of the 
Treasury may prescribe; but no such articles shall be landed at any 
port of the United States.” 

Sec. 15. That all articles manufactured in whole or in part of imported 
materials, or of materials subject to internal-revenue tax, and intended 
for exportation without being charged with duty, and without having 
an internal-revenue stamp affixed thereto, shall, under such regulations 
as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe, in order to be so manu 


70 


factured and exported, be made and manufactured in bonded warehouses 
similar to those known and designated in Treasury Regulations as 
bonded warehouses, class six: Provided , That the manufacturer of such 
articles shall first give satisfactory bonds for the faithful observance of 
all the provisions of law and of such regulations as shall be prescribed 
by the Secretary of the Treasury: Provided further , That the manu¬ 
facture of distilled spirits from grain, starch, molasses or sugar, includ¬ 
ing all dilutions or mixtures of them or either of them, shall not be 
permitted in such manufacturing warehouses. 

Whenever goods manufactured in any bonded warehouse established 
under the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall be exported 
directly therefrom or shall be duly laden for transportation and imme¬ 
diate exportation under the supervision of the proper officer who shall 
be duly designated for that purpose, such goods shall be exempt from 
duty and from the requirements relating to revenue stamps. 

Any materials used in the manufacture of such goods, and any pack¬ 
ages, coverings, vessels, brands, and labels used in putting up the same 
may, under the regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury, be con¬ 
veyed without the payment of revenue tax or duty into any bonded 
manufacturing warehouse, and imported goods may, under the afore¬ 
said regulations, be transferred without the exaction of duty from any 
bonded warehouse into any bonded manufacturing warehouse; but this 
privilege shall not be held to apply to implements, machinery, or appa¬ 
ratus to be used in the construction or repair of any bonded manufac¬ 
turing warehouse or for the prosecution of the business carried on 
therein. 

No articles or materials received into such bonded manufacturing 
warehouse shall be withdrawn or removed therefrom except for direct 
shipment and exportation or for transportation and immediate exporta¬ 
tion in bond under the supervision of the officer duly designated there¬ 
for by the collector of the port, who shall certify to such shipment and 
exportation, or ladening for transportation, as the case may be, describ¬ 
ing the articles by their mark or otherwise, the quantity, the date of 
exportation, and the name of the vessel. All labor performed and 
services rendered under these provisions shall be under the supervision 
of a duly designated officer of the customs and at the expense of the 
manufacturer. 

A careful account shall be kept by the collector of all merchandise 
delivered by him to any bonded manufacturing warehouse, and a sworn 
monthly return, verified by the customs officers in charge, shall be made 
by the manufacturers containing a detailed statement of all imported 
merchandise used by him in the manufacture of exported articles. 

Before commencing business the proprietor of any manufacturing 
warehouse shall file with the Secretary of the Treasury a list of all the 
articles intended to be manufactured in such warehouse, and state the 
formula of manufacture and the names and quantities of the ingre¬ 
dients to be used therein. 

Articles manufactured under these provisions may be withdrawn 
under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe 
for transportation and delivery into any bonded warehouse at an exte 
rior port for the sole purpose of immediate export therefrom. 

The provisions of Revised Statutes thirty-four hundred and thirty- 
three shall, so far as maybe practicable, apply to any bonded manufac¬ 
turing warehouse established under this Act and to the merchandise 
conveyed therein. 

Sec. 1G. That all persons are prohibited from importing into the 


71 


United States from any foreign country any obscene book, pamphlet, 
paper, writing, advertisement, circular, print, picture, drawing, or other 
representation, figure, or image on or of paper or other material, or any 
cast, instrument, or other article of an immoral nature, or any drug or 
medicine, or any article whatever for the prevention of conception or 
for causing unlawful abortion, or any lottery ticket or any advertise¬ 
ment of any lottery. No such articles, whether imported separately or 
contained in packages with other goods entitled to entry, shall be 
admitted to entry; and all such articles shall be proceeded against, 
seized, and forfeited by due course of law. All such prohibited articles 
and the package in which they are contained in the course of importa¬ 
tion shall be detained by the officer of customs, and proceedings takeu 
against the same as hereinafter prescribed, unless it appears to the 
satisfaction of the collector of customs that the obscene articles con¬ 
tained in the package were inclosed therein without the knowledge or 
consent of the importer, owner, agent, or consignee: Provided , That 
the drugs hereinbefore mentioned, when imported in bulk and not put 
up for any of the purposes hereinbefore specified, are excepted from 
the operation of this section. 

Sec. 17. That whoever, being an officer, agent, or employee of the Gov¬ 
ernment of the United States, shall knowingly aid or abet any person 
engaged in any violation of any of the provisions of law prohibiting 
importing, advertising, dealing in, exhibiting, or sending or receiving 
by mail obscene or indecent publications or representations, or means 
for preventing conception or procuring abortion, or other articles of 
indecent or immoral use or tendency, shall be deemed guilty of a mis¬ 
demeanor, and shall for every offense be punishable by a fine of not 
more than five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment at hard labor for 
not more than ten years, or both. 

Sec. 18. That any judge of any district or circuit court of the United 
States, within the proper district, before whom complaint in writing of 
any violation of the two preceding sections is made, to the satisfaction 
of such judge, and founded on knowledge^or belief, and if upon belief, 
setting forth the grounds of* such belief, and supported by oath or 
affirmation of the complainant, may issue, conformably to the Consti¬ 
tution, a warrant directed to the marshal or any deputy marshal in the 
proper district, directing him to search for, seize, and take possession of 
any such article or thing mentioned in the two preceding sections, and 
to make due and immediate return thereof to the end that the same 
may be condemned and destroyed by proceedings, which shall be con¬ 
ducted in the same manner as other proceedings in the case of munic¬ 
ipal seizure, and with the same right of appeal or writ of error. 

Sec. 19. That machinery for repair may be imported into the United 
States without payment of duty, under bond, to be given in double the 
appraised value thereof, to be withdrawn and exported after said 
machinery shall have been repaired; and the Secretary of the Treasury 
is authorized and directed to prescribe such rules and regulations as 
may be necessary to protect the revenue against fraud and secure the 
identity and character of all such importations when again withdrawn 
and exported, restricting and limiting the export and withdrawal to the 
same port of entry where imported, and also limiting all bonds to a 
period of time of not more than six months from the date of the impor¬ 
tation. 

Sec. 20. That the produce of the forests of the State of Maine upon 
the Saint John Kiver and its tributaries, owned by American citizens, 
and sawed or hewed in the Province of New Brunswick by American 


72 


citizens, the same being otherwise unmanufactured in whole or in part, 
which is now admitted into the ports of the United States free of duty, 
shall continue to be so admitted, under such regulations as the Secre 
tary of the Treasury shall from time to time prescribe. * 

Sec. 21. That the produce of the forests of the State of Maine upon 
the Saint Croix Eiver and its tributaries owned by American citizens, 
and sawed or hewed in the Province of New Brunswick by American 
citizens, the same being otherwise unmanufactured in whole or in part, 
shall be admitted into the ports of the United States free of duty, 
under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury shall from 
time to time prescribe. 

Sec. 22. That a discriminating duty of ten per centum ad valorem, in 
addition to the duties imposed by law, shall be levied, collected, and 
paid on all goods, wares, or merchandise which shall be imported in 
vessels not of the United States, or which being the production or 
manufacture of any foreign Country not contiguous to the United States, 
shall come into the United States from such contiguous country; but 
this discriminating duty shall not apply to goods, wares, or merchandise 
which shall be imported in vessels not of the United States, entitled at 
the time of such importation by treaty or convention to be entered in 
the ports of the United States on payment of the same duties as shall 
then be payable on goods, wares, and merchandise imported in vessels 
of the United States, nor to such foreign products or manufactures as 
shall be imported from such contiguous countries in the usual course of 
strictly retail trade. 

Sec. 23. That no goods, wares, or merchandise, unless in cases pro¬ 
vided for by treaty, shall be imported into the United States from any 
foreign port or place, except in vessels of the United States, or in such 
foreign vessels as truly and wholly belong to the citizens or subjects of 
that country of which the goods are the growth, production, or manu¬ 
facture, or from which such goods, wares, or merchandise can only be, 
or most usually are, first shipped for transportation. All goods, wares, 
or merchandise imported contrary to this section, and the vessel 
wherein the same shall be imported, together with her cargo, tackle, 
apparel, and furniture, shall be forfeited to the United States; and 
such goods, wares, or merchandise, ship, or vessel, and cargo shall 
be liable to be seized, prosecuted, and condemned in like manner, and 
under the same regulations, restrictions, and provisions as have been 
heretofore established for the recovery, collection, distribution, and 
remission of forfeitures to the United States by the several revenue 
laws. 

Sec. 24. That the preceding section shall not apply' to vessels or 
goods, wares, or merchandise imported in vessels of a foreign nation 
which does not maintain a similar regulation against vessels of the 
United States. 

Sec. 25. That the importation of neat cattle and the hides of neat 
cattle from any foreign country into the United States is prohibited: 
Provided , That the operation of this section shall be suspended as to 
any foreign country or countries, or any parts of such country or coun¬ 
tries, whenever the Secretary of the Treasury shall officially determine, 
and give public notice thereof that such importation will not tend to 
the introduction or spread of contagious or infectious diseases among 
the cattle of the United States; and the Secretary of the Treasury is 
hereby authorized and empowered, and it shall be liis duty, to make all 
necessary orders and regulations to carry this section into effect, or 
to suspend the same as herein provided, and to send copies thereof to 


73 


the proper officers in the United States, and to snch officers or agents 
of the United States in foreign countries as he shall judge necessary. 

Sec. 26. That any person convicted of a willful violation of any of 
the provisions of the preceding section shall be fined not exceeding five 
hundred dollars, or imprisoned not exceeding one year, or both, in the 
discretion of the court. 

Sec. 27. That upon the reimportation of articles once exported, of 
the growth, product, or manufacture of the United States, upon which 
no internal tax lias been assessed or paid, or upon which such tax has 
been paid and refunded by allowance or drawback, there shall be lev¬ 
ied, collected, and paid a duty equal to the tax imposed by the internal- 
revenue laws upon such articles, except articles manufactured in bonded 
warehouses and exported pursuant to law, which shall be subject to 
the same rate of duty as if originally imported. 

Sec. 28. That whenever any vessel laden with merchandise, in whole 
or in part subject to duty, has been sunk in any riv^r, harbor, bay, or 
waters subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, and within 
its limits, for the period of two years, and is abandoned by the owner 
thereof, any person who may raise such vessel shall be permitted to 
bring any merchandise recovered therefrom into the port nearest to the 
place where such vessel was so raised free from the payment of any 
duty thereupon, but under such regulations as the Secretary of the 
Treasury may prescribe. 

Sec. 29. That the works of manufacturers engaged in smelting or 
refining metals, or both smelting and refining, in the United States may 
be designated as bonded warehouses under such regulations as the Sec¬ 
retary of the Treasury may prescribe: Provided , That such manufac¬ 
turers shall first give satisfactory bondsto the Secretary of the Treasury. 
Ores or metals in any crude form requiring smelting or refining to make 
them readily available in the arts, imported into the United States to 
be smelted or refined and intended to be exported in a refined but 
unmanufactured state, shall, under such rules as the Secretary of the 
Treasury may prescribe, and under the direction of the proper officer, 
be removed in original packages or in bulk from the vessel or other 
vehicle on which they have been imported, or from the bonded ware¬ 
house in which the same may be, into the bonded warehouse in which 
such smelting or refining, or both, may be carried on, for the purpose 
of being smelted or refined, or both, without payment of duties thereon, 
and may there be smelted or refined, together with other metals of home 
or foreign production: Provided , That each day a quantity of refined 
metal equal to ninety per centum of the amount of imported metal 
smelted or refined that day shall be set aside, and such metal so set 
aside shall not be taken from said works except for transportation to 
another bonded warehouse or for exportation, uuder the direction of 
the proper officer having charge thereof as aforesaid, whose certificate, 
describing the articles by their marks or otherwise, the quantity, 
the date of importation, and the name of vessel or other vehicle by 
which it was imported, with such additional particulars as may from 
time to time be required, shall be received by the collector of customs 
as sufficient evidence of the exportation of the metal, or it may be 
removed under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may 
prescribe, upon entry and payment of duties, for domestic consump¬ 
tion, and the exportation of the ninety per centum of metals hereinbe¬ 
fore provided for shall entitle the ores and metals imported under 
the provisions of this section to admission without payment of the 
duties thereon: Provided further , That in respect to lead ores imported 


74 


under the provisions of this section the refined metal set aside shall 
either be reexported or the regular duties paid thereon within six months 
from the date of the receipt of the ore. All labor performed and serv 
ices rendered under these regulations shall be under the supervision 
of an officer of the customs, to be appointed by the Secretary of the 
Treasury, and at the expense of the manufacturer. 

Sec. 30. That where imported materials on which duties have been 
paid are used in the manufacture of articles manufactured or produced 
in the United States, there shall be allowed on the exportation of such 
articles a drawback equal in amount to the duties paid on the materials 
used, less ouc per centum of such duties: Provided , That when the 
articles exported are made in part from domestic materials the imported 
materials, or the parts of the articles made from such materials, shall so 
appear in the completed articles that the quantity or measure thereof 
may be ascertained: And provided further , That the drawback on any 
article allowed under existing law shall be continued at the rate herein 
provided. That the imported materials used in the manufacture or 
production of articles entitled to drawback of customs duties when 
exported shall, in all cases where drawback of duties paid on such 
materials is claimed, be identified, the quantity of such materials used 
and the amount of duties paid thereon shall be ascertained,*the facts of 
the manufacture or production of such articles in the United States and 
their exportation therefrom shall be determined, and the drawback due 
thereon shall be paid to the manufacturer, producer, or exporter, to the 
agent of either or to the person to whom such manufacturer, producer, 
exporter, or agent shall in writing order such drawback paid, under 
such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe. 

Sec. 31. That all goods, wares, articles, and merchandise manufac¬ 
tured wholly or in part in any foreign country by convict labor shall 
not be entitled to entry at any of the ports of the United States, and 
the importation thereof is hereby prohibited, and the Secretary of the 
Treasury is authorized and directed to prescribe such regulations as 
may be necessary for the enforcement of this provision. 

Sec. 32. That sections seven and eleven of th&Act entitled u An Act 
to simplify the laws in relation to the collection of the revenues,” 
approved June tenth, eighteen hundred and ninety, be, and the same 
are hereby, amended so as to read as follows: 

Sec. 7. That the owner, consignee, or agent of any imported mer¬ 
chandise which has been actually purchased may, at the time when he 
shall make and verify his written entry of such merchandise, but not 
afterwards, make such addition in the entry to the cost or value given 
in the invoice or pro forma invoice or statement in form of an invoice, 
which he shall produce with his entry, as in his opinion may raise the 
same to the actual market value or wholesale inice of such merchandise 
at the time of exportation to the United States, in the principal markets 
of the country from which the same has been imported; but no such 
addition shall be made upon entry to the invoice value of any imported 
merchandise obtained otherwise than by actual purchase; and the col¬ 
lector within whose district any merchandise may be imported or 
entered, whether the same has been actually purchased or procured 
otherwise than by purchase, shall cause the actual market value or 
wholesale price of such merchandise to be appraised; and if the 
appraised value of any article of imported merchandise subject to an 
ad valorem duty or to a duty based upon or regulated in any manner 
by the value thereof shall exceed the value declared in the entry, there 
shall be levied, collected, and paid, in addition to the duties imposed by 


75 


law on such merchandise, an additional duty of one per centum of the 
total appraised value thereof for each one per centum that such 
appraised value exceeds the value declared in the entry, but the addi¬ 
tional duties shall only apply to the particular article or articles in 
each invoice that are so undervalued, and shall be limited to titty per 
centum of the appraised value of such article or articles. Such addi¬ 
tional duties shall not be construed to be penal, and shall not be 
remitted, nor payment thereof in any way avoided, except in cases 
arising from a manifest clerical error, nor shall they be refunded in 
case of exportation of the merchandise, or on any other account, nor 
shall they be subject to the benefit of drawback: Provided , That if the 
appraised value of any merchandise shall exceed the value declared in 
the entry by more than fifty per centum, except when arising from a 
manifest clerical error, such entry shall beheld to be presumptively 
fraudulent, and the collector of customs shall seize such merchandise 
and proceed as in case of forfeiture for violation of the customs laws, 
and in any legal proceeding that may result from such seizure, the 
undervalua tion as shown by the appraisal shall be presumptive evidence 
of fraud, and the burden of proof shall be on the claimant to rebut the 
same and forfeiture shall be adjudged unless he shall rebut such pre¬ 
sumption of fraudulent intent by sufficient evidence. The forfeiture 
provided for in this section shall apply to the whole of the merchandise 
or the value thereof in the case or package containing the particular 
article or articles in each invoice which are undervalued: Provided , 
further , That all additional duties, penalties or forfeitures applicable 
to merchandise entered by a duly certified invoice, shall be alike appli 
cable to merchandise entered by a pro forma invoice or statement in 
the form of an invoice, and no forfeiture or disability of any kind, 
incurred under the provisions of this section shall be remitted or miti¬ 
gated by the Secretary of the Treasury. The duty shall not, however, 
be assessed in any case upon an amount less than the invoice or entered 
value. 

Sec. 11. That, when the actual market value as defined by law, of 
any article of imported merchandise, wholly or partly manufactured and 
subject to an ad valorem duty, or to a duty based in whole or in part 
on value, can not be otherwise ascertained to the satisfaction of the 
appraising officer, such officer shall use all available means in his power 
to ascertain the cost of production of such merchandise at the time ot 
exportation to the United States, and at the place of manufacture; such 
cost of production to include the cost of materials and of fabrication, 
all general expenses covering each and every outlay of whatsoever 
nature incident to such production, together with the expense of pre¬ 
paring and putting up such merchandise ready for shipment, and an 
addition of not less than eight nor more than fifty per centum upon the 
total cost as thus ascertained; and in no case shall such merchandise 
be appraised upon original appraisal or reappraisement at less than the 
total cost of production as thus ascertained. It shall be lawful for 
appraising officers, in determining the dutiable value of such merchan¬ 
dise, to take into consideration the wholesale price at which such or 
similar merchandise is sold or ottered for sale in the United States, due 
allowance being made for estimated duties thereon, the cost of trans 
portation, insurance, and other necessary expenses from the place of 
shipment to the United States, and a reasonable commission, if any has 
been paid, not exceeding six per centum. 

Sec. 33. That on and after the day when this Act shall go into effect 
all goods, wares, and merchandise previously imported, for which no 


7G 


entry lias been made, and all goods, wares, and merchandise previously 
entered without payment of duty and under bond for warehousing, 
transportation, or any other purpose, for which no permit of delivery 
to the importer or his agent has been issued, shall be subjected to the 
duties imposed by this Act and to no other duty, upon the entry or the 
withdrawal thereof: Provided , That when duties are based upon the 
weight of merchandise deposited in any public or private bonded ware¬ 
house, said duties shall be levied and collected upon the weight of such 
merchandise at the time of its entry. 

Sec. 34. That sections one to twenty-four, both inclusive, of an Act 
entitled “An Act to reduce taxation, to provide revenue for the Gov¬ 
ernment, and for other purposes,” which became a law on the twenty- 
eighth day of August, eighteen hundred and ninety-four, and all acts 
and parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this Act are 
hereby repealed, said repeal to take effect on and after the passage of 
this Act, but the repeal of existing laws or modifications thereof em¬ 
braced in this Act shall not affect any act done, or any right accru¬ 
ing or accrued, or any suit or proceeding had or commenced many civil 
cause before the said repeal or modifications;but all rights and liabili¬ 
ties under said laws shall continue and may be enforced in the same 
manner as if said repeal or modifications had not been made. Any 
offenses committed and all penalties or forfeitures or liabilities incurred 
prior to the passage of this Act under any statute embraced in or 
changed, modified, or repealed by this Act may be prosecuted or pun¬ 
ished in the same manner and with the same effect as if this Act had 
not been passed. All Acts of limitation, whether applicable to civil 
causes and proceedings or to the prosecution of offenses or for the 
recovery of penalties or forfeitures embraced in or modified, changed, 
or repealed by this Act shall not be affected thereby; and all suits, 
proceedings, or prosecutions, whether civil or criminal, for causes 
arising or acts done or committed prior to the passage of this Act may 
be commenced and prosecuted within the same time and with the same 
effect as if this Act had not been passed: And provided further , That 
nothing in this Act shall be construed to repeal the provisions of 
section three thousand and fifty-eight of the Efeyised Statutes as 
amended by the Act approved February twenty-third, eighteen hun¬ 
dred and eighty seven, in respect to the abandonment of merchandise 
to underwriters or the salvors of property, and the ascertainment of 
duties thereon: And provided further, That nothing in this Act shall 
be construed to repeal or in any manner affect the sections numbered 
seventy-three, seventy-four, seventy-five, seventy-six, and seventy-seven 
of an Act entitled “An Act to reduce taxation, to provide revenue for 
the Government, and for other purposes,” which became a law on the 
twenty-eighth day of August, eighteen hundred and ninety-four. 

Approved, July 24, 1897. 


INDEX TO TARIFF . 1 

July 24, 1897. 


A. 

Paragraph. 

Abortion, articles 

for caus- 

iug, importation proliib- 

ited. 

secs. 16,17,18 
. 292 

Absinthe. 

Acetate, lead. 

. 60 

Acetic acid. 

Acids: 

. 1 

acetic. 

. 1 

arseuic . 

. 464 

arsenious. 

. 464 

benzoic. 

. 464 

boracic. 

. T 

carbolic. 

. 464 

chromic. 

. 1 

citric. 

. 1 

fluoric... 

. 464 

gallic. 

. 1 

hydrochloric .... 

. 464 

lactic. 

. 1 

muriatic. 

. 464 

nitric .. 

. 464 

nitro-picric. 

. 464 

not specially provided for. 1 

oxalic. 

. 464 

phosphoric. 

. 464 

phthalic. 

. 464 

picric. 

. 464 

prussic. 

. 464 

pyroligenous.... 

. 1 

ricinoleic. 

. 32 

salicylic_. 

. 1 

silicic. 

. 464 

sulpho-ricinoleic 

. 32 

sulphuric. 

. 1,675 

tannic... .. 

. 1 

tartaric... 

. 1 

valerianic. 

. 464 

Aconite. 

. 465 

Acorns. 

. 283,466 


Administrative act amend¬ 
ed .sec. 32 


Paragraph. 

Agate buttons.. 414 

Agate, manufactures of. 115 

Agates. 4(37 

Agricultural drills. 460 

Agriculture, Department of, * 

seeds, etc., for. 640 

Alabaster, manufactures of.. 115 

Albata. 174 

Albumen. 245,468 

Albumeuized paper./ 398 

Albums: 

autograph. . 404 

photograph. 404 

scrap. 404 

Alcohol, amylic. 38 

Alcoholic compounds. 2 

preparations, 

medicinal. 67 

perfumery. 2 

Ale. 297 

Ale, ginger. 300 

Alizarin assistant. 32 

Alizarin: 

artificial.t 469 

dyes from. 469 

natural. 469 

Alkalies.3,73 

Alkaline silicate. 79 

Alkaloids. 3 

of cinchona bark. 647 

opium. 43 

Alloys: 

aluminum. 172 

nickel. 185 

used as substitutes for 

steel. 135 

Almond oil. 626 

Almonds. 269 

Alpaca, hair of. 348,350,356 

Althea root. 611 

Alum. 4 

cake. 4 


1 For articles specified in reciprocity sections 3 and 4, see page 124. 

77 











































































78 


Alum—Continued. Paragraph. 

crystals. 4 

ground. 4 

patent. 4 

Alumina: 

livdrate of. 4 

sulphate of. 4 

Aluminous cake. 4 

Aluminum. 172 

alloys of.. . 172 

in crude form. 172 

in leaf. 175 

in plates, sheets, bars, and 

rods. 172 

manufactures of. 193 

Amber. 470 

gum. 470 

manufactures of. 448 

oil. 626 

Ambergris. 471 

oil, crude and rectified.... 626 

Amberoid.. 470 

American: 

artists, works of. 703 

fisheries, products of. 626 

goods exported and re 

turned. 483 

goods exported and re¬ 
turned, internal-revenue 

tax on. sec. 27 

vessels built for foreign 
ownership, or for foreign . 

trade...... sec. 12 

vessels, coal stores of.'.... 523 

Ammonia: 

carbonate of. 5 

muriate of. 5 

sulphate of. 5 

Amylic alcohol. 38 

Anatomy, preparations of... 663 

Anchors or parts of. 127 

Anchovies. 258 

Andirons. 148 

Angora goat, hair of.. 350,356 

Angles, iron and steel. 125 

Anhydrous boracic acid. 11 

Aniline: 

arseniate of. 480 

oil.. 626 

salts. 472 

Animal bladders, integu¬ 
ments, and intestines. 496 

Animal carbon. 499 

Animals. 218, 

219, 220,221,222,473,474 

for breeding purposes. 473 

exhibition, etc. 474 


Animals—Continued. Paragraph. 

for immigrants. 474 

racing. 474 

hair of. 348,350,351, 

356, 357,358,359,364, 430, 571 
integuments and intestines 

of. 496 

live. 218-222 

teams of. 474 

wild, for exhibition, etc ... 474 

Anise oil. . 626 

seed. 656 

seed oil. 626 

Ann at to, and extracts of.... 475 

Anthoss oil. 626 

Anthracite coal. 523 

Antifriction ball lorgings... 127 

Antimony: 

metal. 173 

ore. 476 

regulus of. 173 

sulphite of, crude. 476 

Antiquities, for exhibition . 702 

Anvils. 142 

Apatite. 477 

Apparatus : 

philosophical. 638, 701 

platinum. 642 

scientific. 638, 701 

Apparel: 

theatrical. 645 

wearing, of passengers.... 697 

wearing, embroidered..... 339, 
370,390 

Apples. 262 

Applications, toilet... 70 

Appliqued articles .. 312,339,390 

Appraisement of value_sec. 32 

Aqueous extract of opium .. 43 

Argols, crude and partly re¬ 
fined . 6 

Argentine. 174 

Arms: 

fire. 157,158 

side... 154 

Aromatic seeds. 20,548 

Arrack. 292 

Arrowroot. 478 

Arseniate: 

of aniline. 480 

of soda... 78 

Arsenic, and sulphide of.... 479 

Arsenic or arsenious acid ... 464 

Art: 

educational stops. 481 

squares, made of carpeting 
of wool... 382 

















































































Art—Continued. Paragraph. 

works of. 701, 702, 703 

works of American artists 

abroad. 703 

Articles: 

cast iron.. 147,148,150 

composed of earthy or min¬ 
eral substances. 97 

composed of two or more 

materials. sec. 7 

domestic growth, manufac¬ 
ture, or production. 483 

drawback on... sec. 30 

for the United States.. 500, 640 
glass, cut, engraved, etc. .. 100 

illustrating the progress of 
the arts, sciences, etc... 702 

in a crude state, for dyeing 

or tanning, n. s. p. f. 482 

of an immoral nature.. secs. 16, 

17,18 

similar in material, quality, 

etc. sec. 7 

smokers’. 459 

unen umerated. sec. 6 

Artificial: 


alizarin . 469 

feathers.:. 425 

fruits. 425 

flowers. 425 

grains . 425 

leaves . •.. 425 

mineral waters. 301 

stems. 425 

sulphate of barytes. 46 

sulphate of lime. 46 

Artists: 

American, works of. 703 

colors and paints. 58 

knives. 155 

Arts: 

collections in illustration of 

the progress of the. 702 

models of invention and 
other improvements in 616 

Asafetida. 486 

Asbestos : 

manufactures of. 448 

unmanufactured. 484 

Ash, soda. 78 

Ashes. 485 

beet root. 485 

bone. 499 

lye of wood. 485 

Asphalt, limestone-rock- 93 

Asphaltum.:. 93 

Aspic oil .. 626 


Paragraph. 

Attar of roses, oil of. 626 

Assistant, alizarin. 32 

Aubusson carpets. 372 

rugs . 379 

Autograph albums. 404 

Axles. 143 

bars. 143 

blanks. 143 

fitted in wheels. 143,171 

forgings for. 143 

iron or steel. 143 

parts of. 143 

Axminster carpets. 372 

rugs. 379 

Azaleas.. 251 

B. 

Back saws. 168 

Bacon and hams . 273 

Bagatelle balls. 417 

Bagging: 

for cotton. 344 

waste. 632 

Bags: 

domestic, returned. 483 

gunny, old, for paper stock. 632 

jute. 313 

Ball forgings, antifriction... 127 

Balls: 

bagatelle. 417 

billiard. 417 

chess .. 417 

pool. 417 

Balm of Gilead. 487 

Balsams. 20,548 

Bamboo. 700 

Band iron or steel... 128,129,132 

Band leather. 438 

Band saws. 168 

Bandings. 320 

silk. 389 

wool. 371 

Bands, cotton, flax or other 

vegetable fiber. 339 

Bar iron. 123 

Bar tin. 683 

Barks: 

cinchona. 488 

alkaloids or salts 

of..: . 647 

cork. 416 

drugs. 20,548 

hemlock, extracts of. 22 

Bnrley. 223 

hulled. 225 


















































































80 


Barley—Continued. Paragraph. 

malt. 224 

patent. 225 

pearled. 225 

Barrel buttons, wool. 371 

Barrel hoops, iron or steel .. 128 

Barrels: 

containing oranges, limes, 

and lemons. 205 

domestic, returned. 483 

empty. 204 

for shot guns, rough bored. 658 

Bars. 135 

axle. 143 

copper. 532 

iron, rolled or hammered.. 124 

lead . 182 

platina.*.. 641 

railway. 130 

splice. 130 

Baryta.... 44 

carbonate of. 489 

sulphate of. 44 

Barytes earth. 44 

manufactured. 44 

unmanufactured. 44 

Basic slag. . 121 

Basswood lumber. 195 

Bauxite or beauxite.4, 93 

Bay rum.. 294, 296 

Bay water. 294,296 

Beaded silk goods. 390 

Beads. 408 

articles composed wholly 

or in part of . 408 

Beams. 125 

bulb. 125 

deck. 125 

iron or steel. 125 

Bean seed. 656 

Beans. 240,241 

castor. 254 

drugs. 20, 548 

ground, or peanuts. 271 

prepared, etc. 241 

tonquin, tonqua, or tonka. 685 

Beauxite. 4, 93 

Beds: 

carpeting sides of. 382 

curled hair fcr. 430 

Bed sets. 339,340 

Beef, fresh ... . 274 

Beer. 297 

coloring for. 18 

ginger. 300 

Beeswax . 490 


Paragraph. 

Beet-root ashes ... 485 

Beet, sugar seed. 656 

Bell metal and bells, broken. 492 

Belting: 

cotton..... 320 

leather. 438 

silk. 389 

wool. 371 

Benzaldehyde. 524 

Benzidin. 524 

Benzoic acid. 464 

Benzol.. 524 

Bergamot, oil of... 626 

Benzyl chloride. 524 

Berlin blue. 45 

rugs. 379 

Berries. 262 

cranberries. 262 

desiccated. 262 

dried . 262,559 

drugs. 20,548 

evaporated. 262 

green.559 

ripe. 559 

Beverages, spirituous_ 292-293 

other. 300 

Bibulous paper. 397 

Bicarbonate of soda. 73 

Bichromate of potash. 62 

soda. 74 

Billets, iron or steel...:.. 124,135 

Billiard balls. 417 

Billiard chalk. 13 

Binding twine. 491 

Bindings: 

cotton. 320 

silk. 389 

wool. 371 

Binitrotoluol. 524 

Binitrobenzol. 524 

Birds.. 493,494 

dressed and finished. 425 

eggs. 549 

skins, with feathers. 425 

stuffed, not suitable for 
millinery ornaments.... 493 

Bismuth . 495 

Bisque ware. 95, 96 

Bitters. 292,296 

Bitumen . 93 

Bituminous coal. 415 

Black, bone. 47 

copper. 534 

ivory, bone, or vegetable.. 47 

lamp'. 47 

































































































81 


Black, bone-Cont’d. Paragraph. 

oxide of tin. 683 

plush, hatters’. 461 

sa ts. 644 

sheet iron and steel. 13L 

taggers iron and steel_ 134 

Blacking of all kinds. 7 

Blacksmiths’ hammers and 

sledges. 144 

Bladders: 

crude. 496 

fish, prepared. 23 

manufactures of. 448 

Blades, knife. 153 

Blanc fixe. 46 

Blank books. 403 

Blankets, wool. 367 

Blanks: 

axle. 143 

bolt. 145 

button. 414 

for railway tires. 171 

hinge. 145 

Blasting caps. 424 

Bleaching powder. 8 

Blocks: 

last, gun, wagon, oar, head¬ 
ing, and all like. 200,699 

lead. 182 

marble. 114 

onyx. 114 

zinc. 192 

Blood, dried. 245, 497 

Blooms: 

iron or steel. 124 

for railway tires. 171 

Blue: 

Berlin. 45 

Chinese. 45 

containing ferro-cyanide of 

iron. 45 

Prussian. 45 

ultramarine. 52 

vitriol. 9 

wash. 52 

Boards, planks, and deals 

sawed. 198 

Bookings. 380 

Bodkins. 165 

Boiler tubes, pipes, flues, or 

stays. 152 

plate, iron or steel... 126 

Bologna sausages. 655 

Bolt blanks. 145 

5797—02-6 


Paragraph. 

Boltingcloths for milling use. 498 


Bolts: 

iron or steel. 145 

shingle, handle. 699 

heading and stave. 200 

Bond paper. 401 

Bonded manufacturing ware¬ 
houses. sec. 15 

Bonded warehouses: 
for smelting and refining 

metals. sec. 29 

removal of opium from.... 43 

withdrawals from. sec. 14,15,33 
Bone: * 

ash. 499 

bagatelle balls. 417 

billiard balls. . 417 

black. . 47 

buttons. 414 

casings, cotton. 320 

casings, silk. 389 

char. 10 

chess balls. 417 

chessmen. 417 

cuttle fish. 543 

dice. 417 

draughts. 417 

dust or animal carbon .... 499 

manufactures of. 449 

pool balls.417 

Bones, crude. 499 

Bonnet and hat pins. 188 

Bonnet wire. 137 

Bonnet braids, plaits, and 

laces. 409 

Bonnets. 409*432 

Bookbinders’ calfskins. 438 

Booklets, lithographic. 400 

Books. 403,500-504 

blank books, all kinds.403 

professional. 645 

Boot, shoe, and corset lacings 

of cotton, flax, etc.!. 320 

Boots, leather. 438 

Boracic acid. 1 

Borate: 

of lime. 11 

material n. s. p. f. 11 

of soda. 11 

Borax. 11 

Bort or diamond dust. 545 

Botanic Garden, U. S., plants, 

trees, etc., for. 640 






















































































82 


Paragraph. 

Botany, specimens of. 666 

Bottles: 

containing quicksilver.... 189 

filled with wine. 295, 296 

filled with beverages con¬ 
taining no alcohol. 300 

filled with mineral waters 
and artificial mineral 

waters. 301 

glass. 99,100 

quicksilver, returned. 483 

Bottoms, copper. 176 

Bounty, additional duty re¬ 
quired . sec. 5 

Box chronometers and parts. 191 

Box shooks. 204, 205 

Boxwood. 198, 700 

Boxes: 

American shooks returned 
as boxes containing for¬ 
eign products. 483 

containing oranges, lemons, 
limes, grape fruit, shad¬ 
docks, or pomelos. 205 

shooks returned as boxes 
containing oranges and 

lemons. 205 

packing. 204 

paper, fancy. 405 

Braces: 

cotton or other vegetable 

fiber. 320 

silk. 389 

wool. 371 

Brads. 164 

Braids: 

of flax, cotton, or other 

vegetable fiber... . 339 

of straw, etc., for making 
hats, bon nets,and hoods. 409 

of tinsel wire . 179 

silk. 390 

wool_t. 371 

Branding and marking .... sec. 8 

Brandy. 289,293 

ascertainment of proof of.. 290 

coloring for. 18 

Brass. 505 

clippings from. 505 

old. 505 

Brazier’s copper. 176 

Brazil nuts .. 622 

paste. 506 

Brazilian pebble. 507 

Bread knives. 155 


Paragraph. 

Breccia, in blocks. . 508 

Breech-loading firearms and 

parts. 158 

Briar wood and briar root... 700 

Brick. 87 

encaustic. 87 

fire. 87 

Brimstone, crude. 674 

Brislings. 258 

Bristles. 411,509 

Britannia metal, old. 637 

British gum. 286 

Bronze metal leaf. 175 

powder. 175 

Broom corn. 510 

Brooms. 410 

Brown wool grease. 279 

Brushes. 410 

Brussels carpets. 374,376 

Buckles, trousers. 412 

Buckwheat. 226 

Budding knives and parts . . 153 

Buds, as drugs. 20, 548 

Building forms. 125 

stone...117,118 

Bulb beams. 125 

Bulbous roots.... 20, 251, 548, 656 

Bulbs. 20,251,548,656 

Bullion, gold or silver.._ 511 

lead. 182 

Bullions, or metal thread.... 179 

Bunting, wool. 369 

Burgundy pitch. 512 

Burnt starch. 286 

Burrstones.. 116, 671 

Butchers’ knives. 155 

skewers. 207 

Butter. 236 

cocoa. 282 

knives. 155 

substitutes for. 236 

Butterine (cocoa). 282 

Button blanks. 414 

forms. 413 

molds. 414 

Buttons: 

agate. 414 

barrel, and other parts for 

tassel. 371 

bone. 414 

collar. 414 

cult*. 414 

glass. 414 

born. 414 

ivory, vegetable. 414 





















































































83 


Buttons-Continued. Paragraph. 

metal. 414 

metal trousers(except steel) 414 

nickle bar. 414 

n.s.p. f.. 414 

pearl. 414 

shell. 414 

shoe, of paper, etc. 414 

steel trousers. 414 

trousers, metal (except 

steel). 414 

wool. 371 

vegetable ivory. 414 

Butts, jute, unmanufactured. 5(16 

C. 

Cabbages ... 242 

Cabinet furniture. 208 

woods in the log.... 700 

sawed. .. 198 

Cables : 

hemp. 326 

istle, Tampico liber, manila, 

sisal grass, or sunn. 326 

Cacao, crude. 528 

Cadmium. 513 

Calcined bones. 499 

Cajeput oil. 626 

Cake alum. 4 

aluminous. 4 

salt or niter cake. 80 

Calamine . 514 

Calcined magnesia. 31 

Calfskins: 

bookbinders’. 438 

tanned and dressed. 438 

Calomel. 68 

Camel, hair of... 348,351, 356, 358 
hair, manufactured .. 383 

Cameos, in frames. 434 

Camphor : 

crude. 515 

refined. 12 

Candle wicking, cotton or 

other vegetable fiber. 320 

Candy, sugar. 212 

Cane, chair. 206 

Caps: 

blasting. 424 

percussion.. 424 

Capsicum. 287 

Caraway seed. 656 

oil. 626 

Carbolic acid. 464 

Carbon, animal. 499 

Carbon articles and wares .. 97 


Paragraph. 

Carbon pots for electric bat¬ 


teries . 98 

Carbonate: 

of ammonia. 5 

of baryta. 489 

of magnesia, medicinal ... 31 

of potash. 644 

of soda, bi and crystal... 73, 75 
of strontia, or strontianite. 673 
Carbons for electric light¬ 
ing . 98 

Carboys: 

American manufacture_483 

glass. 99 

Cardamom seed. 656 

Card clothing. 146 

laps, cotton. 302 

Carded or combed silk. 384 

Carded yarn. 302 

Cards: 

playing. 406 

internalrevenuetaxon (sec. 

38, act Aug. 28, 1894). 

Carmined indigo. 25 

Carpet: 

*irt squares. 382 

bedsides. 382 

covers. 382 

hassocks. 382 

mats. 334,382 

rugs for floors. 334,382 

screens, wool. 382 

Carpets: 

Aubusson. 372 

Axminster.. .. 372 

bookings. 380 

Brussels . 374 

tapestry. 376 

chain Venetian. 377 

chenille. 372 

cork. 337 

cotton. 381 

druggets. 380 

Butch wool. 378 

flax. 334,381 

hemp. 334 

ingrain— 

three-ply. 377 

treble. 377 

two ply. 378 

jute... 334 

moquette. 372 

velvet. 373,375 

Saxony. 373 

tapestry. 375 























































































84 


Carpets—Continued. 

Paragraph. 

Paragraph. 

Tournay. 


373 

Cedar, sawed. 

198 

Wilton. 


373 

Cedrat oil. 

626 

wool. 

378,381 

Celluloid, and articles of.... 

17 

woven whole for rooms. 


379 

Cement: 


On.rtrid crcs 


424 

Conner . 

534 






Car-truck channels. 


125 

hydraulic. 

89 

Carving knives and forks 

.. 

155 

Portland. 

89 

Casks (empty). 


204 

Roman.. 

89 

of American manufac- 


Ceramic mosaic tiles. 

88 

ture, returned .. 


483 

Cerium. 

518 

Cases, musical instrument.. 

453 

Chains of all kinds. 

151 

Casings, bone, cotton, 

or 


Chair cane. 

206 

other vegetable fiber .. 


320 

Chalcedony, manufactures of 

115 

Casings, bone, silk.. 


389 

Chalk: 


Cassava or cassady. 


677 

billiard. 

13 

Cassia, cassia buds, and cas- 


crude, not ground, precip¬ 


sia vera. 


667 

itated, or manufactured. 

519 

Cassia, oil of. 


626 

French. 

13 

Cassiterite. 


683 

ground. 

13 

Castile soap. 


72 

manufactures of. . 

13 

Cast hollow ware. 


150 

precipitated. 

13 

Castings: 



prepared. 

13 

iron, n. s. p. f. 


148 

red. 

13 

malleable iron, n. s. p. f. 

. - . 

149 

tailors’. 

13 

Cast: 



Champagne. 

295 

hollow ware. 


150 

Chamomile oil. 

626 

iron andirons. 


148 

Channels. 

125 

hatters’ irons. 


148 

Channels, car-truck. 

125 

pipe. 


147 

Charms. 

95 

jffates. 


148 

Charts. 

403, 

sad irons. 


148 

Charts for societies. 

503 

stove plates. 


148 

hydrographic. 

501 

tailors’ irons. 


148 

printed over twenty 


vessels. 


148 

years . 

501 

scrap. 


122 

Cheese, and substitutes there¬ 


Castor. 


516 

for . 

237 

beans or seeds. 


254 

knives. 

155 

oil. . 


33 

Chemical compounds. 

3 

Castoreum. 


516 

salts. 

3 

Catgut: 



wood pulp. 

393 

manufactures of. 


448 

Chenille carpets. 

372 

unmanufactured. 


517 

curtains. 

316 

Cattle. 

218, 473 

silk. 

386 

hair.. 


571 

table covers. 

316 

hides of. 


437 

Cheroots. . 

217 

neat, hides of. 

. sec. 25 

Cherry juice. 

299 

neat, importation of, pro- 


Cherries. 

262 

hibited. 

. sec. 25 

Chessmen and chess balls... 

417 

Cauliflower seed. 


656 

Chicory root. 

280 

Caustic potash. 


63 

Chicle. 

30 

soda. 


76 

Chiffon. 

390 

Cayenne pepper. 


287 

Chimney-pieces, slate. 

120 

Cedar: 



China clay. 

93 

in the log. 

198 

,700 

ware. 95,96 

lumber... 


196 

Chinese blue... 

45 




























































































85 


Paragraph. 


Chinese matting. 333 

Chip braids, plaits, etc., for 

ornamenting hats. 409 

hats of. 409 

manufactures of. 449 

Chlorate of potash. 63 

soda. 75 

Cloride of lime. 8 

Chloroform. 14 

Chocolate. 281 

prepared or manufactured. 281 

Chromate of iron . 520 

potash. 62 

soda. 74 

Chrome green. 48 

yellow. 48 

Chromic acid. 1 

ore. 520 

Chromium colors. 48 

Chronometers: 

box or ship, and parts of.. 191 

Chrysolite, manufactures of . 115 

Cider. 243 

Cigar boxes (sec. 26, act 
August 28, 1894). 

Cigar labels, lithographic_ 400 

Cigarette books and book- 

covers . 459 

Cigarette paper. 459 

Cigarettes. 217 

Cigars.*. 217 

internal revenue tax on.. sec. 10 
stamps. sec. 10 

Cinchona bark. 488 

alkaloids of. 647 

salts of. 647 

Cinnamon, and chips of. 667 

oil. 626 

Circular saws. .I.. 168 

Citric acid. 1 

Citronellaoil. 626 

Citron or citron peel. 267 

Civet, crude. 521 

oil of. 626 

Clapboards. 199 

Claspknives. 153 

Clay: 

china or kaolin. 93 

common blue, for crucible.. 522 

pipes and pipe bowls. 459 

wrought and unwrought.. 93 

Clippings: 

as paper stock. 632 

from new copper. 533 

Clock cases.95,115 


Paragraph. 

Clock wire. 137 

Clocks, jewels for. 191 

Clocks, or parts of. 191 

Cloth: 

bolting, silk. 498 


hair, known as hair seat¬ 
ing . 431 

hair crinoline cloth. 431 

hair press cloth. 431 

oil, for floors. 337 

waterproof. 337 


Clothing: 

card. 146 


Cloths: 

gunny. 344 

Italian. 368,369 

Cloves and clove stems. 667 

Coal. 415 

anthracite. 523 

bituminous. 415 

coke. 415 

culm. 415 

fuel for vessels. 415 

shale. 415 

slack. 415 

stores of American ves¬ 
sels . i . 523 

Coal tar: 

colors. 15 

crude. 524 

dyes. 15 

pitch of. 524 

preparations, not medici¬ 
nal, not colors or dyes .. 15 

products of. 524 

products or preparations n. 

s. p. f. 15 

Coat linings of wool. 368,369 

Cobalt. 525 

ore. 525 

oxide of. 16 

Cocculus indicus. 526 

Cochineal. 527 

Cocoa: 

crude. 528 

butter. 282 

butterine. 282 

fiber. 528 

leaves and shells of. 528 

nut meat, prepared . 267 

nuts in the shell. 622 

nuts, prepared. 267 
























































































86 


Cocoa—Continued. Paragraph. 


Paragraph 

nuts, crude, fiber leaves and 


Cooks’ knives, forks, 

and 


shells of. 

528 

steels. 


155 

oil of. 

626 

Copper: 



prepared or manufactured. 

281 

black or coarse. 


534 

powdered. 

281 

bottoms. 


176 

Cocoons, silk. 

661 

braziers’. 


176 

Cod-liver oil. 

34 

cement. 


534 

Coffee.. 

529 

clippings from new... 


533 

substitutes for. 

283 

coins. 


530 

Cogged ingots. 135, 

171 

composition metal- 


533 

Coins: 


manufactures of. 


193 

foreign values of, sec. 25, 


medals. 


612 

act Aug. 28, 1894. 


old. 


533 

gold, silver, and copper, free 

530 

ores. 


629 

Coir and coir yarn. 

531 

plates, bars, ingots, pigs, 


Coke .. 

415 

and other forms.... 


532 

Collar and cuff buttons. 

414 

regulus of. 


534 

Collars and cuffs. 

338 

rolled plates ot. 


176 

Collections of antiquities for 


rods. 


176 

exhibition. 

702 

sheathing. 


176 

Collodion and all compounds 


sheets of. 


176 

thereof. 

17 

subacetate of. 


694 

articles of. 

17 

sulphate of. 


9 

rolled or in sheets. 

17 

Copperas. 


19 

Cologne water. 

2 

Copra. 

. 267,622 

Coloring for beer. 

18 

Copying books. 


397 

brandy . 

18 

paper. 


397 

other liquors . .. 

18 

Coral: 



wine.. 

18 

marine.... 


535 

Colors and paints. (See 

N 

manufactures of.. •.... 


115 

Paints and colors.) 


Cordage: 



coal tar. 

15 

hemp. 


329 

Columns and posts. 

125 

istle or Tampico fiber, 

ma- 


Combination guns. 

158 

nila, sisal grass or sunn. 

329 

Combination suits. 

319 

Cordials. 


292 

Comfits. 

263 

ginger. 


296 

Compounds, alcoholic. 

2 

Cords : 



alcoholic medicinal. 

67 

and tassels, silk. 


389 

chemical. 

3 

wool. 


371 

of pyroxiline. 

17 

cotton. 


320 

or preparations, distilled 


flax. 


330 

spirits. 

291 

ramie. 


330 

Component material of chief 


silk. 


389 

value. sec. 7. 

wool. 


371 

Composition metal, copper.. 

533 

Corduroys, cotton, etc.. 


315 

Conception, articles for pre¬ 


Coriander seed. 


656 

venting, importation pro- 


Cork: 



hibited. secs. 16-18 

artificial. 


416 

Concentrated melada and 


bark cut into squares. 


416 

molasses . . 

209 

carpets. 


337 

Concrete molasses. 

209 

manufactures of. 


448 

Condensed milk. 

239 

wood or bark, unmanu- 


Confectionery.,. 

212 

factured. 


536 

Convict labor, products of, im- 


Corks. 


416 

portation prohibited.. sec. 31 

Conns. 


251 




















































































87 


Paragraph. 

Corn. 227 

broom. 510 

meal.'. 228 

Cornelian, manufactures of.. 115 

Corporations, works of art 

imported specially for_ 702 

Corrugated sheets, iron. 131 

Corset: 

clasps. 137 

covers, cotton or other 

vegetable fiber. 319 

lacings, cotton or other 

vegetable fiber. 320 

steels. 137 

wire. 137 

Corticene. 337 

Cosmetics. 70 

Cotton: 

appliqued articles.312,339 

bagging for.... 344 

bandings and bands.. . 320,339 

bed sets. 339,3 10 

beltings. 320 

bias dress facings. 315 

bindings. 320 

bone casings. 320 

boot lacings. 320 

braces. 320 

braids. 339 

card laps. 302 

carpets. 381 

chenille articles. 310 

cloth. 304-309,313 

containing silk. 311 

definition of. 310 

clothing, ready made. 314 

collars. 338 

combination suits ... 319 

cords. 320 

corduroys. 315 

corset covers. 319 

corset lacings. 320 

crochet. 303 

cuffs. 338 

curtains. 316,339,340 

damask. 321 

darning. 303 

drawers. 319 

duck. 321 

edgings. 339 

embroideries. 339 

embroidered articles. 339 

handkerchiefs. 312,339 

embroidery. 303 

etamines. 339 


Cotton—Continued. Paragraph. 

flocks.. 537 

bouncings. 339 

flu tings . 339 

galloons. 339 

garters. 320 

gins. 400 

gorings. 339 

half hose. 317,318 

liealds. 320 

hose. 317,318 

handkerchiefs. 312,339 

hemstitched handkerchiefs 312 

insertings. 339 

knitted articles ... 317,318,319 

labels. 320 

laces. . 339 

window curtains .... 339,340 

lacings. 320 

lappets. 313 

linings for bicycle tires ... 320 

loom harness. 320 

manufactures of. 322 

mufflers. 312 

napkins. 339 

neck ruchings and rufflings 339 

ties. 314 

wear. 314 

nets or nettings. 339 

outside garments having 
india rubber as a compo¬ 
nent material. 314 

pants. 319 

pile fabrics. 315 

pillow shams. 339,340 

plushes. 315 

quillings. 339 

raw.. 537 

ready-made clothing. 314 

ribbons. 320 

roping. 302 

roving. 302 

ruchings. 339 

rufflings. 339 

seed. 050 

oil.. 35 

shirt collars and cuffs. 338 

shirts. 319 

shoe lacings. 320 

skirt bindings. 315 

skirtings. 339 

sleeve linings . 311 

sliver. 302 

spindle banding. 320 

stockings.. 317, 318 

suspenders. 320 



































































































88 


Cotton—Continued. Paragraph. 

sweaters. 319 

table covers. 31G 

damask. 321 

tamboured articles.... 312,339 

tapes . 320 

thread. . 302 

spool. 303 

tidies. 339 

ties of iron or steel. 129 

tights. 319 

trimmings. 339 

tubing. 320 

tuckings. 339 

underwear. 319 

union suits. 319 

veils or veilings. 339 

velveteens. 315 

velvets. 315 

vests. 319 

vitrages. 339 

warps or warp yarn. 302 

waste. . 537 

wearing apparel. 314,339 

webbing. 320 

webs. 320 

wicking. 320 

yarns. 302 

Court plaster. 69 

Cranberries. 262 

Crayons. 58 

Cream of tartar. 6 

■nuts. 622 

Creosote oil. 524 

Crepe paper. 397 

Cresol . 524 

Crimped iron or steel sheets. 131 

Crinoline cloth, hair. 431 

Crinoline wire. 137 

Crochet cotton. 303 

needles. 165 

Crockery ware: 

decorated. 95,96 

not decorated. 95, 96 

Crosscut saws. 168 

Croton oil. 36 

Crotons. 251 

Crowbars, iron or steel. 144 

Crown glass .... 101,102,105,107 

Crucibles. 94 

Crude minerals, n. s. p. f- 614 

tartar or wine lees. 6 

Cryolite or kryolith. 538 

Crystal, rock, manufactures 
of. 115 


C rystals : Paragraph. 

alum. 4 

lees. 6 

soda. 77 

Cubic nitrate of soda. 665 

Cudbear. 539 

Cuffs. 338 

Culm of coal. 415 

Cultivators. 460 

Cum i din. 524 

Cummin seed. 656 

Curled hair. 430 

Curling stones and handles . 510 

Currants, Zante or other.... 264 

Curative plasters. 69 

Curry, and curry powder ... 541 

Curtains: 

chenille, cotton. 316 

lace, window. 339,340 

Cutch. 542 

Cutlery. 153,155 

Cut glass. 100 

Cuttings, hide. 572 

nursery stock. 252 

Cuttle-fish bone. 543 

Cyanite or kyanite. 591 

Cyanide of potassium. 66 

Cylinder and crowu glass_ 101, 

102,105 

Cylindrical furnaces. 152 

D. 

Damask, cotton. 321 

Dandelion root. 283, 544 

Darning cotton. 303 

Darning needles. 620 

Dates. 264 

Dead oil. 524 

Deals. 195,198 

Decanters. 100 

Deck beams . 125 

Decoctions of logwood and 

dyewoods. 22 

Degras. 279 

Demijohns. 99 

Dentrifices. 70 

Designs, Jacquard. 402 

Dextrine. 286 

Diamonds: 

cut. 435 

bort. 545 

dust .. . 545 

eugravers’. 545 

glaziers’... 545 






























































































89 


Diamonds—:Continued. Paragraph. 


imitations.. 435 

miners’. 545 

not set. 435 

rough and uncut. 545 

watch or clock jewels. 191 

Dianisidin. o24 

Dice. 417 

Die blocks, steel. 135 

Diphenylamin. 524 

Discriminating duty. sec. 22 


Discs, glass or plates, rough 
cut for optical instruments. 5G5 

Distilled oils. . 3 

spirits, compounds, 
or preparations 

of. 289,291 

spirits, internal- 
revenue tax (act 
August 28,1894). 

secs. 48-68 


Divi-divi. 546 

Dolls and doll heads. 418 

Domestic articles returned.. 483 

Down quilts. 425 

Downs. 425 

Dracaenas . 251 

Drag saws... *. 168 

Drainings, sugar. 209 

Dragon’s blood. 547 

Draughts. 417 

Drawback: 

coal as fuel for vessels.... 415 

on exported merchandise.sec. 30 
reimported domestic arti¬ 
cles (sec. 27). 483 

supplies for vessels of 

United States. sec. 

Drawers, cotton, or other veg¬ 
etable liber. 319 

Drawing paper. 401 

Drawings for exhibition.... 701 

pen and ink. 454 

Dress : 

facings, bias. 315 

goods, wool. 368-369 

steels. 137 

Dressed line, flax. 325 

Dried acorns. 466 

apples... 262 

berries. 262 

blood . 245 

chicory root. 280 

citron or citron peel. 267 


fibers, insects, etc.. 20,548 


Paragraph. 


Dried fish. 261 

fruits,edible.... 262 

or berries, n.s.p.f. 559 

grapes. 264 

lemon peel. 267 

pease. 250 

peaches. 262 

pears . 262 

orange peel. 267 

Drills, agricultural. 460 

Dross from burnt pyrites... 121 

lead. 182 

Druggets. 380 

Drugs. 20,548 

prohibited-sec. 16,17,18 

Dry plates or films, photo¬ 
graphic . 458 

Duck, cotton. 321 

Dust, diamond. 545 

Dusters, feather. 410 

Dutch ingrain carpets. 378 

metal, in leaf. 175 

Dye, lac, crude, seed, button, 

stick, shell. 592 

Dyeing: 

articles used for, crude.... 482 

drugs, etc.,for, advanced.. 20 

crude. 548 

extracts and decoctions 

for. 22 

Dyes: 

all coal tar, n. s. p. f. 15 

alizarin, natural and arti¬ 
ficial . 469 

extract of logwood. 22 

lac. 592 

Dyewoods, extracts of. 22 

E. 

Earth, barytes. 44 

Earthenware .... . 94-98 

carbon pots, porous. 98 

carbons for electric lighting 98 

common yellow, brown, or 

gray. 94 

crucibles. 94 

decorated. 95,96,97 

filter tubes .. 98 

gas retorts. 98 

lava tips. 98 

manufactures of. 95,96,97 

plain. 94, 95, 96, 97 

ornamented.. 95, 96,97 













































































9G 


Earthenware—Oont’d. Paragraph. 

Rockingham. 94 

tiles. 88 

Earths: 

fullers’.. 93 

ochery. 49 

wrought or manufactured. 93 

sienna. 49 

umber . 49 

unwrought and unmanufac¬ 
tured . 93 

Ebony wood. 198, 700 

Edgings: 

cotton or other vegetable 

liber. 339 

silk. . 390 

wool. 371 

Educational stops, art. 481 

Effects: 

household, of persons emi¬ 
grating to the United 

States. 504 

of citizens of the United 
States dying abroad.... 636 

personal, of passengers... 697 

Egg albumen. 245 

Eggs. 244,245,549 

birds’ .. 549 

fish. 549 

insects’. 549 

silk worms’. 662 

yolk of. 245 

Electrotype plates. 166 

Embossed tiles... . . 88 

Embroidered articles: 

flax, cotton, or other vege¬ 
table fiber . 339 

handkerchiefs. 312 

wool. 371 

silk. 390 

Embroideries. 339,371,390 

bead. 408 

metal. 179 

Emery: 

files. 419 

grains. 419 

ground. 419 

manufactures of. 419 

ore. 550 

pulverized. 419 

refined. 419 

wheels. 419 

Enamel: 

fusible. 113 

glass, white. 564 


Paragraph. 

Enameled iron, steel, or other 
metal plates or 


wares. 159 

brick. 87 

china or earthen¬ 
ware . 95, 96 

leather. 438 

tiles. 88 

Encaustic tiles. 88 

Enfleurage grease. 626 

Engraved steel plates. 166 

glass bottles or ar¬ 
ticles . 100 

Engravers’ diamonds . 545 

Engravings, bound or un¬ 
bound . 403,501 

Envelopes. 399 

Epsom salts. 31 

Equipment of vessels, arti¬ 
cles imported for . secs. 12,13 
Erasers, or parts thereof.. .. 153 

Ergot. 551 

Essences, fruit. 21 

Essential oils. 3 

Etamines. 339 

Etchings. 403 

printed more than twenty 

years. 501 

Ethers. 21 

fruit. 21 

nitrous, spirits of. 21 

n. s. p. f. 21 

sulphuric. 21 

Excrescences.. 20,548 

Explosive substances. 422 

Expressed oils. 3 

Extracts of: 

barks. 22 

dyewoods. 22 

hemlock bark. 22 

hops. 248 

indigo. 25 

licorice, in paste, rolls, etc. 29 

logwood. 22 

madder. 604 

meat. . 276 

munjeet. 604 

quebracho. 22 

safflower. 651 

saffron. 651 

sumac. 22 

woods other than dyewoods 22 

wool. 362 

Eyeglasses. 108 




















































































91 


Paragraph. 

Fancy soap. 72 

Fans of all kinds except com¬ 
mon palm leaf. 427 

common palm leaf. 552 

Feather dusters. 410 

Feathers: 

artificial. 425 

crude. 425 

dressed. 425 

ornamental. 425 

Felt: 

adhesive, for sheathing ves¬ 
sels . 553 

roofing. 394 

wool, not woven. 370 

Fence posts. 200 

rods of iron or steel... 136 

Fennel oil. 626 

seed. 656 

Fenugreek seed. 656 

Ferromanganese. 122 

silicon. 122 

Fiber: 

Tampico or istle . 566 

Tampico cables and cord¬ 
age . 329 

ware, indurated. 433 

Fibers, dried . 20,548 

Fibrin. 554 

Fibrous substances, vegeta- ’ 

ble. 566 

Field glasses. Ill 

Figs. 264 

Filberts, shelled and not 

shelled. 270 

File blanks. 156 

Files. 156 

emery. 419 

Films, photographic. 458 

Filter masse or stock. 395 

paper. 397 

tubes. 98 

Firearms: 

combination shotguns and 

rifles. 158 

muskets, muzzle - loading 
shotguns, rifles, and parts 

thereof. 157 

sporting. 158 

Fireboards, paper for. 402 

Fire brick. 87 

Firecrackers. 420 

Firewood. 599 


Fish: Paragraph. 

American caught. 555,626 

anchovies. 258 

bladders. 23 

brislings . 258 

canned. 258 

dried. 261 

eggs. 549 

fresh. 261 

fresh, frozen, or packed in 

ice. 261,555 

fresh water. 259 

glue. 23 

halibut. 261 

herrings. 260 

mackerel. 261 

oil, American fisheries .... 624 

n. s. p. f. 42 

packed in oil. 258 

paste. 241 

pickled. 261 

products of American fish¬ 
eries . 555,626 

plates. 130 

salmon... 261 

salted. 261 

salt water. 258 

sardels or sardellen.• 258 

sardines. 258 

sauce. 241 

shell. 659 

shrimps. 659 

skinned or boned. 261 

skins. 556 

sprats...». 258 

smoked. 261 

sounds. 23,496 

Fishing rods, sticks for. 700 

Flannel for underwear. 367 

Flasks containing quicksilver 189 

Flat rails. 130 

wire rods. 136 

Flats, bar iron. 123 

Flax: 

articles n.s.p.f . 346,347 

carpets and carpeting . 334,381 

cords. 330 

“dressed line”. 325 

embroideries. 339 

gill netting. 332 

hackled. 325 

handkerchiefs. 345 

hydraulic hose. 335 

laces. 339 

manufactures of. 347 




























































































92 


Flax-Continued. Paragraph. 

mats. 334 

nets. 332 

not hackled or dressed.... 324 

oilcloth for floors. 337 

pile fabrics. 342 

rugs. 334 

seines. 332 

shirt collars and cuffs .... 338 

shirting cloth. 346 

straw. 323 

tapes. 336 

threads. 330 

tow of. 326 

trimmings. 339 

twines. 330 

webs. 332 

waterproof cloth. 337 

woven fabrics. 346 

yarns, single. 331 

Flaxseed. 254 

Flaxseed oil. 37 

Flint. 557 

flint, lime, or lead glass bot¬ 
tles . 99 

stones, un ground. 557 

tiles. 88 

Floats, metal, of all cuts and 

kinds. 156 

'Flocks, cotton. 537 

wool. 363 

Floor matting .. 333, 452 

oil cloth. 337 

tiles. 88 

Floss, silk.». 385 

Flouncings: 

cotton or other vegetable 

fiber. 339 

silk. 390 

wool. 371 

Flour: 

rice . 232 

rye. 233 

snuff*. 216 

wheat. 235 

Flower seeds. 656 

Flowers: 

artificial or ornamental ... 425 

as drugs. 20,548 

natural.. 251 

of sulphur. 84 

Flues, boiler. 152 

Fluoric acid. 464 

Fluted glass. 103 

Flutings, flax or cotton. 339 


Paragraph. 

Forgings of iron or steel. 127,143 

Forks. 155 

tuning. 453 

Forms, iron or steel. 125 

Fossils. 558 

Fowls: 

land. 494 

poultry. 278 

water. 494 

Frames for optical instru¬ 
ments .:- 111 

Frames for spectacles, eye¬ 
glasses, and goggles.... 108 

Frames of looking-glass plate 106 

Freestone. 117,118 

French chalk. 13 

Fresh beef, veal, mutton, and 

pork... s. 274 

Friction matches. 423 

Fringes: 

silk. 390 

wool. 371 

Fruit essences. 21 

ethers. 21 

grape. 266 

juice. 299 

knives... 155 

oils. 21 

plants, tropical and 

semitropical. 560 

Fruits. 262,559 

apples. 262 

artificial or ornamental -.. 425 

as drugs.T- 20, 548 

berries. 262,559 

cherries. 262 

citron. 267 

cranberries. 262 

currants. 264 

currants, Zante. 264 

dates . 264 

dried, n. s. p. f. 559 

figs. 264 

grapes. 264,265 

green. 559 

in brine. 559 

lemons. 266 

limes. 266 

olives. 264 

oranges. 266 

peaches. 262 

pears. 262 

pineapples, w.. . 263,268 

plums. 262,264 



























































































93 


Fruits-Continued. Paragraph. 

pomelos. 266 

preserved in sugar, molas¬ 
ses, spirits, or in their own 

.juices. 263 

prunes. 264 

prunelles. 264 

quinces. 262 

raisins. 261 

ripe. 559 

shaddocks. 266 

tamarinds. 676 

Zante currants. 264 

Fullers’ earth. 93 

Fulminates. 421 

Fulminating powders. 421 

Furnaces, cylindrical. 152 

Furniture: 

h ouse or cabi net. 208 

household, of persons from 

foreign countries. 503 

Fur: 

dressed. 426 

for hatters’ use. 426 

hats. 432 

manufactures of. 450 

skins car rotted. 426 

skins not dressed in any 

manner. 562 

Furs, undressed. 561 

Fusel oil. 38 

Fusible enamel. 113 

G. 

Gallic acid. 1 

Galloons: 

cotton or other vegetable 

liber. 339 

silk. 390 

wool. 371 

Galvanized iron. 132 

Gambier. 563 

Garden seeds. 254 

Garlic. 249 

Garnet, manufactures of.... 115 

Garnetted waste. 361 

Garters. 320,389 

Gas retorts. 98 

Gelatin. 23 

manufactures of. 450 

Gems. 435 

German silver. 174 

Gilead, balm of. 487 

Gill netting, flax. 332 

Gimps, wool. 371 


Ginger: Paragraph. 

ale. 300 

beer. 300 

cordial. 296 

root, unground. 667 

wine. 296 

Gins, cotton . 460 

Girders, iron or steel. 125 

Glass: 

articles of, cut, engraved, 
painted, stained, etc.... 100 

beads. 408 

bent. 107 

beveled. 107 

bottles, filled or unfilled. 99,100 
containing wines . 295, 

296 

containing ale or 

beer. 297 

containing ginger 
ale. 300 




containing mineral 


water. 301 

buttons. 414 

carboys.. 99, 48i 

cast polished plate. 104,105,107 

colored. 99,100,107 

common window. 101,107 

coquill. ... 109 

crown. 101,102,105,107 

cut. 100 

cylinder. 101,102,105,107 

decanters..*. 100 

decorated. 107 

demijohns. 99 

diamonds, imitation. 435 

discs for optical instru¬ 
ments ... . 565 

embossed. 107 

enamel for watch dials.... 564 

enameled. 107 

engraved... 100,107 

etched. 100,107 

flashed. 107 

flint, lime, or lead bottles. 99 

fluted. 103 

frosted. 107 

gilded. 100 

green, plain. 99 

ground. 100,107 

jars. 99 

lenses. 109, 111 


looking-glass plates ... 105,106 
manufactures of, or paste, 

n. s. p. f. 112 

microscopes... Ill 























































































94 


Glass—Continued. Paragraph. 

mirrors. 112 

obscured. 107 

optical instruments. Ill 

ornamented. 107 

painted. 100,107 

paste, manufactures of, 

n. s. p. f. 112 

plain green. 99 

piano or coquill. 109 

plate. 103-107 

plates or discs, for optical 

instruments. 565 

pressed. 99 

printed. 100 

rolled. 103 

rough plate. 103 

sanded. 107 

silvered. 100,105,106,107 

slides for magic lanterns.. 110 

spectacles. 108 

stained, w. 107 

stained or pain ted windows, 

or parts ..... 112 

strips. 110 

telescopes. Ill 

unpolished, contents of 

boxes. 101 

vessels, filled or unfilled... 100 

vials. 99 

window. 101,107 

windows. 112 

Glasses: 

coquill. 109 

eye. 108 

discs for. 565 

field. Ill 

goggles. 108 

opera. Ill 

piano. 109 

Glassware: 

blown. 100 

colored. 100 

opal . 100 

porcelain. 100 

Glazed common stoneware.. 94 

Glaziers’ diamonds. 545 

lead. 182 

Gloves: 

kid or goat. 442,444 

lamb or sheep skin. 441,443 

leather. 439,442, 444-445 

Schmasclien. 440 

Glove tranks. 446 

Glucose. 210 


Paragraph. 


Glue, crude and refined. 23 

fish or isinglass. 23 

stock. 572 

Glycerin. 24 

Goat hair. 348,350,356 

skins,. 438 

Goggles. 108 

Gold: 


beaters’ molds. 567 

skins. 567 

bullion. 511 


bullions and metal threads. 179 


coins. 530 

leaf. 177 

manufactures of. 193 

medals. 612 

ores . 629 

pens. 187 

size or japan. 53 

sweepings. 629 

tinsel wire, lame or lahn .. 179 

Goods: 

knit silk. 390 

liable to two or more rates 

of duty. . sec. 7 

manufactured in bonded 


warehouses for exporta- 

tation. sec. 15 

product of convict labor, 
importation prohibited 
(sec. 4, act Aug. 28,1894). 
taken from sunken ves¬ 
sels . sec. 28 


Goriugs: 

cotton. 339 

silk. 389 

wool. 371 

Grain bags, exported filled.. 483 

Grains, as drugs ... . 20, 548 


Gr an u 1 a ted tin. 683 

Grape fruit. 266 

sugar. 210 

Grapes. 265 

Grass braids, etc., for making 
or ornamenting bon¬ 
nets, etc. 409 

hats of... . 409 

manufactures of..... 449 

seeds. 656 

sisal. 566 

Grasses and fibers not dressed 566 
for paper. 632 



















































































95 


Paragraph. 

Grease from wool. 279 

used for soap making, 
wire drawing, or 
stuffing or dressing 

leather. 568 

Green, chrome. 48 

fruits. 262,559 

paris. 59 

Grindstones, finished or un¬ 
finished . 119 

Ground alum. 4 

beans or peanuts ... 271 

bones. 499 

chalk . 13 

chicory root. 280 

mustard. 287 

plaster of paris. 91 

sumac. 85 

Guano .. 569 

Gum: 

amber or amberoid. 470 

British. 286 

resin. 20,548 

shellac. 592 

substitute or dextrine .... 286 

Gums: 

advanced.?. . 20 

crude... 548 

Gun-barrel molds. 135 

barrels. 158 

for shot guns... 658 

blocks. 699 

powder. 422 

wads. 428 

Gunny cloth and bags. 344 

old, for paper stock. 632 

Guns, shot. 157,158 

Gutta-percha, manufactures 

of. 450 

crude. 570 

Gut: 

cat_-. . 448, 517 

whip. 448, 517 

worm. 448, 517 

Gypsum, ground and uu- 

ground. 91 

H. 

Hackled flax. 325 

hemp. 327 

Hair: 

advanced beyond the 
washed or scoured con¬ 
dition . 364 


Hair—Continued. Paragraph. 

alpaca. 348,350,356 

Angora goat. 350,356 


camels’.. . 348,350,356,358,359 

cattle. 571 

cloth. 431 

curled. 430 

goat. 348 

horse . 571 

human. 429 

cleaned or drawn. 429 

human, manufactures of.. 450 

raw, uncleaned. 571 

manufactures of (see Wool¬ 
en). 363-383 

on the skin. 360 

pencils. 410 

pins . 188 

preparations and applica¬ 
tions for the. 70 

press cloth. 431 

Kussian camel’s. 351 

seating. 431 

wood sticks. 700 

Half hose, cotton. 317,318 

Halibut. 261 

Hammered iron or steel. 124 

Hammer molds. 135 

Hammers, blacksmiths’. 144 

Hams. 273 

Handkerchiefs: 

cotton. 312 

embroidered. 339 

hemp . 345 

lace. 339 

silk. 388 

Handle bolts . 699 

Handles for curling stones.. 540 

knives or eras¬ 
ers . 153,155 

parasols or um¬ 
brellas . 462 

Handsaws. 168 

Hangings, paper. 402 

Hard rubber, manufactures of 450 

Harness, leather. 447 

loom. 320 

Harrows. . 460 

Harvesters. 460 

Hassocks made of carpeting 382 

Hatbands. 389 

braids.. 409 

pins. 188 

wire. 137 




















































































96 


Paragraph. 

Hats. 409,432 

Hatters 7 irons. 148 

plusli. 401 

Hawaiian Islands, treaty ... 209 

Hay. 246 

Head nets. 371 

Heading holts. 200 

blocks. 200 

Heads, dolls. 418 

Healds. 320 

Healing plasters. 69 

Hemlock bark, extracts of .. 22 

Hemp: 9 

articles n. s. p. f. 347 

bagging for cotton. 344 

cables and cordage. 329 

carpets and carpetings.... 334 

cords. 330 

coverings for cotton. 341 

“dressed line”. 327 

hackled. 327 

hydraulic hose. 335 

k and kerchiefs. 345 

line of. 327 

manufactures of. 347 

mats. 334 

not hackled. 324 

New Zealand, binding 

twine. 491 

rugs. 334 

seed. 656 

seed oil. 39 

shirting cloth. 346 

threads. 330 

tow. 327 

twine. 330 

woven fabrics. 346 

yarns... 331 

Hemstitched handkerchiefs. 312, 

345,388 

Herbs. 20, 548 

Herring oil. 42 

Herrings. 260 

Hewn timber. 194 

Hide cuttings, raw. 572 

rope. 573 

Hides and skins. 437 

n. s. p. f. 664 

Hinge blanks. 145 

Hinges. 145 

Hoarhound seed. 656 

Hobnails, wrought. 161 

Hogsheads, empty. 204 

Hones. 574 

Honey. 247 


Paragraph. 


Hoods, braids, etc., for orna¬ 
menting . 409 

Hoods, straw, chip, etc. 409 

fur. 432 

Hoofs, unmanufactured. 575 

Hooks and eyes. 180 

Hoop iron or steel... 128,129,132 

Hop poles. 699 

extract .. . 248 

roots. 576 

Hops.-. 248 

Horn buttons. 414 

manufactures of. 449 

strips. 577 

tips. 577 

Horns, and parts of. 577 

Horsehair, raw. 571 

Horserakes. 460 

Horseshoe nails. 161 

Horseshoes, wrought from 

steel. 163 

Horses. 220 

Hose, cotton . 317,318 

Hose, hydraulic. 335 

House furniture. 208 

Household effects of persons 
arriving in the United 

States. 504 

Hubs for wheels . 200 

Human hair .. 429 

manufactures of 450 

Hunting knives. 155 

Hyacinths. 251 

Hydrate of alumina. 4 

potash. 63 

soda or caustic 

soda. 76 

Hydraulic cement. . 89 

hose, linen. 335 

Hydriodate of potash. 64 

Hydrochloric acid. 464 

Hydrographic charts____ 501 

I. 

Ice. 578 

Ichthyol oil.. 626 

Imitation mineral waters.... 301 


Imitation precious stones... 435 

Implements of persons arriv¬ 
ing in the United States. 645 

Improvements in the arts ... 616 

India malacca joints. 700 

India rubber: 
articles composed in part 
of.... 314, 371,389,390 

























































































97 


India rubber—Cont’d. Paragraph. 

Iron or steel: 

Paragraph. 

crude . 

579 

alloys. 


135 

manufactures of. 

449 

anchors. 


127 

milk of. 

579 

andirons.. 


148 

scrap or refuse. 

579 

angles. 


125 

vulcan i zed, m an u faetu res 


anvils. 


142 

of. 

450 

articles n. s. p. f. 


193 

India straw mattings. 

333 

artists’ knives. 


155 

Indian corn. 

227 

axle bars. 


143 

Indian madder. 

604 

blanks. 


143 

Indigo. 

580 

forgings. 


143 

extracts or pastes of. 

25 

axles. 


143 

Indicus cocculus.... 

520 

fitted in wheels. 

. . 143, 

171 

Indurated fiber wares. 

433 

back saws. 


168 

Ingots: 


band. 128,129, 

132 

cogged iron or steel. 

135 

band steel for making 


copper . 

532 

band saws. 


128 

for railway ties. 

171 

band saws. 


168 

platina. 

641 

barrel hoops. 


128 

steel . 

135 

bar. 

.. 123, 

141 

Ingrain— 


bars, railway. 


130 

treble. 

377 

basic slag. 


121 

three-ply carpets. 

377 

beams. 


125 

two-ply carpets. 

378 

billets. 

... 124, 

135 

Ink. 

26 

black taggers. 


134 

powders. 

26 

blacksmiths’ hammers and 


Insects, dried. 20,548 

sledges. 


144 

eggs. 

549 

blades for scissors 

and 


Insertings: 


shears.. 


153 

cotton or flax. 

339 

blades, sword. 


154 

silk. 

390 

blanks, file.. 


156 

wool. 

371 

blanks for railway wheels. 

171 

Institutions, books for. 

503 

blooms. 


124 

Instruments— 


blooms foi railway wheels. 

171 

of persons arriving in the 


bodkins. 


165 

United States. 

645 

boiler or other plate 


126 

philosophical and scientific 

638 

boiler or other tubes, 

pipes, 


musical and cases for. 

453 

Hues, or stays- 


152 

Integuments of animals. 

496 

bolt blanks. 


145 

Intestines. 

496 

bolts.. . 


145 

Inventions, models of. 

616 

bonnet inns.---- 


188 

Invoices, additions to make 


wire. 


137 

market value.sec. 32 

brads... 


164 

must specify character of 


bread knives. 


155 

tobacco. 

214 

budding knives .... 


153 

Iodateof potash. 

64 

buckles, trousers... 


412 

Iodide of potash . 

64 

building forms. 


125 

Iodine. 

27 

bulb beams. 


.125 

crude . 

581 

butchers’ knives ... 


155 

Iodoform ... . 

28 

butter knives_ 


155 

Ipecac. 

582 

card clothing. 


146 

Iridium . 

583 

car-truck channels 


125 

Iron: 


carving knives and forks.. 

155 

chromate of. 

520 

cast and malleable . 


139 

sulphate of. 

19 

cast hollow ware... 


150 

sulphuret of. 

674 

cast-iron pipe. 


147 


5797—02-7 
































































































98 


Iron or steel—Continued. Paragraph, 
cast-iron plates for stoves. 148 


vessels. 148 

castings. 148,140 

steel. 135 

cast scrap. 122 

chain or cbainsof all kinds. 151 

channels. 125 

charcoal . 124 

cheese knives. 155 

chromate ot. 520 

circular saws. 168 

clasp knives.. 153 

clock wires. 137 

cogged ingots. 135 

cogged ingots for railway 

wheels. 171 

coils. 124 

columns T T. 125 

cooks’ knives. 155 

corrugated sheets. 131 

corset clasps. 137 

steels. 137 

wire.. 137 

cotton ties. 129 

crimped sheets. 131 

crinoline wire. 137 

crochet needles . 165 

crosscut saws. 168 

crowbars. 144 

cylindrical furnaces. 152 

deck and bulb beams. 125 

die blocks or blanks. 135 

drag saws. 168 

dress steels. 137 

dross or residuum from 

burnt pyrites. 121 

electrotype plates. 166 

engraved plates. 166 

erasers. 153 

fence rods. 136 

ferro manganese. 122 

ferro- silicon. 122 

files, and file blanks. 156 

fishplates-. 130 

flats, bar iron. 123 

floats. 156 

flues, boiler. 152 

forgings. 127 

antifriction ball.. 127 

for axles. 143 

forms, building. 125 

fruit knives... 155 

furnaces, cylindrical. 152 

girders. 125 

gun-barrel molds. 135 


Iron or steel—Continued. Paragraph. 


hairpins... . 188 

hammered. 123,124 

hammer molds. 135 

hammers, blacksmiths.... 144 

hand saws. 168 

hatters’ irons. 148 

hatpins. 188 

hat wire. 137 

hinges or hinge blanks... 145 

hobnails. x . 161 

hoop. 128,129,132 

horseshoe nails. 161 

horseshoes. 163 

hunting knives. 155 

ingots, cogged. 135 

ingots for railway wheels . 171 

joists. 125 

kentledge. 122 

kitchen knives. 155 

knitting needles. 165 

knives and forks, table ... 155 

latch needles. 165 

lithographed plates. 166 

loops. 124 

manganese, ferro. 122 

manganiferous ore. 121 

manicure knives. 153 

mill saws . 168 

shafting. 135 

mule shoes. 163 

muskets, muzzle loading 
shotguns, and rifles, and 

parts. 157 

nail rods. 136 

nails. 160,161,162 

needle wire. 137 

needles for knitting or sew¬ 
ing machines. 165 

nuts . 163 

ore. 121 

oxshoes. 163 

painters’ knives. 155 

palette knives. 155 

parasol ribs and stretchers. 170 

penknives. 153 

piano wire. 137 

pig . - >. 122 

pins. 188 

pipes. 147,152 

pistols or parts of. 158 

pit saws. 168 

plate. 126,131 

plates. 126,132, 

133,134,135,141,159,166 
plates, cast. 148 


































































































99 


Iron or steel—Continued. Paragraph. 


plates, enameled or glazed 
with vitreous 

glasses. 159 

plumbers’ knives. 155 

pocketknives. 153 

posts or parts of. 125 

pruning knives. 153 

rails, flat. 130 

T. 130 

railway bars. . 130 

fish plates or splice 

bars. 130 

tires or parts of... 171 

rasps. 156 

razors and razor blades... 153 

residuum from burnt py¬ 
rites . 121 

ribs, umbrella and parasol. 170 

rifles, sporting. 158 

rivet rods :. 136 

rivets. 167 

rods. 124,136,141 

nail. 136 

rivet, screw, fence, and 
other. 136 


rolled. 123 

round.123,124 

rust, damage from. 138 

sad irons. 148 

safety pins. 188 

saw plates. 135,141 

saws. 168 

scissors and shears. 153 

scrap, cast and wrought... 122 

steel. 122 

screw rods. 136 

screws, wood. 169 

scroll . 128,132 

sections of columns or 

posts. 125 

sewing-machine needles... 165 

shafting. 135 

shapes. 124,135 

shawl pins. 188 

sheets or plates. 131-134, 

140,141,156 
n. s. p. f.. 135 

shoe knives. 155 

shoes, horse, mule, or ox.. 163 

shotgun barrels. 158,658 

shotguns and rifles. 158 

side arms. - - 154 

silicon, ferro. 122 

skelp.126,131 


Iron or steel — Continued. Paragraph. 


slabs. 124 

slag, basic. 12 L 

sledges, blacksmiths’ . ... 144 

spiegeleisen. 122 

spikes, cut. 160 

spikes, nuts, and washers. 163 

splice bars. 130 

sprigs. 164 

square. 123 

stays, boiler. 162 

steel skelp, sheared and 

rolled. 126 

stereotype plates. 166 

stove plates, cast. 148 

stretchers and frames fot 
umbrellas and parasols. 170 

strip steel. . 128 

structural shapes. 125 

swaged steel. 135 

sword blades. 154 

swords. 154 

T rails . 130 

T T columns. 125 

table and carving kniveA 

and forks. 155 

tacks. 164 

taggers. 134 

tailors’ irons. 148 

tape needles. 165 

terneplates. 134 

ties, cotton... 129 

tinplates. . . 134,140 

tires, locomotive, ear, or 

other railway. 171 

track tools. 144 

trousers buckles. 412 

tubes. 152 

umbrella and parasol ribs 

and stretchers. 170 

vegetable knives.. 155 

wares or articles enameled 

or glazed. 159 

washers.. 163 

waste and refuse. 122 

watch wire. 137 

wedges. 144 

wheels for railway pur¬ 
poses and parts thereof. 171 

wire. 137 

wire nails. 162 

rods. 136 

rope. 137 

round. 137 

strand. 137 

























































































100 


Iron or steel—Continued. Paragraph. 


wood screws. 169 

wrought horseshoes. 163 

nails. 161,162 

scrap... 122 

spikes, nuts, and 

washers. 163 

Isinglass. 23 

Istle. 566 

cables and cordage. 329 

Italian cloths. 368,369 

Ivory: 

bagatelle balls. 417 

billiard balls. 417 

black. 47 

buttons. 414 

chess balls. 417 

chessmen. 417 

dice. 417 

draughts. 417 

manufactures of. 450 

pool balls. 417 

tusks, natural or cut verti¬ 
cally . 584 

vegetable. 584 

buttons. 414 

J. 

Jacquard designs. 402 

figured goods. 391 

Jalap. 585 

Japan varnish. 53 

Japanese straw mattings ... 333 

Japanned leather. 438 

J aponica, terra. 682 

Jars. 99 

Jasmine or jasiinine, oil of... 626 

Jasper, manufactures of .... 115 

Jellies. 263 

Jet, manufactures of. 115 

unmanufactured. 586 

Jewelry. 434, 435,436 

imitations of. 435 

Jewels, watch or clock. 191 

Joists... 125 

Jonquils. 251 

Joss light or Joss stick. 587 

Juglaudium oil. 626 

Jugs containing ale, porter, 

or beer.. 297 
still wines. 296 

Juice: 

cane, sirups of. 209 

cherry . 299 

fruit, n. s. p. f. 299 


Juice—Continued. Paragraph. 

fruits, preserved in. 263 

lemon . .. 597 

lime. 597 

orange, sour. 597 

prune. 299 

Juniper, oil of. 626 

Junk, old. 588 

J ute. v .. 566 

bagging for cotton. 344 

bags. 343 

butts. 566 

carpets and carpetings... 334 

hydraulic hose. 335 

mats. 334 

rugs. 334 

sacks ................... 343 

waste. 632 

woven fabrics. 341 

yarns, single. 328 

% 

K. 

Kainite. 591 

Kangaroo skins. 438 

Kaolin. 93 

Kelp. 589 

Kentledge. 122 

Kid skins. 438 

Kieserite. 590 

Kindling wood. 197 

Kirschwasser. 292 

Kitchen kjiives. 155 

Knitted articles of wearing 

apparel, woolen. 370 

Knitted articles, cotton_ 317, 

318,319 

Knitted fabrics . . 366 

goods, silk. 390 

wearing apparel, 

woolen. 370 

Knitting needles . 165 

Knives: 

artists 7 . 155 

bread. 155 

budding. 153 

butchers’. 155 

butter. 155 

carving. 155 

cheese. 155 

clasp. 153 

cooks’. 155 

erasers. 153 

fruit. 155 

hunting. 155 

kitchen. 155 


























































































101 


Knives — Continued. Paragraph. 

icure. 153 

painters’. 155 

palette. 155 

pen. 153 

plumbers’. 155 

pocket. 153 

pruning. 153 

shoe. 155 

Kryolith. 538 

Kyanite. 501 


L. 


Labeling goods. sec. 8 

Labels, cigar. 400 


cotton . 320 

Lac dye, crude, seed, but¬ 
tons, stick and shell.... 502 

spirits. . . 503 

Lace: 

bands. 330 

bead. 408 

bed sets... 330,340 

braids. 339,300 

chiffon. 300 


chip. 400 

cotton. 339 

curtains. 339 

edgings. 339,390 

embroideries. 339,390 

etamines. 330 

flax. 339 

flouncings. 339,390 

flutings. 339 

fringes. 390 

galloons. 339,390 

go rings. 339 

grass. 400 

handkerchiefs.. 330 

imitation. 330 

insertings.. .. 339,390 

knit goods. 390 

linen. 339 

napkins. 330 

nets or nettings. 339,390 

neck ruchings. 330,300 

rufflings. 339,300 

osier. 409 

palm-leaf. 400 

pillow shams. 339, 340 

quillings. 339 

rattan. 409 

silk. 390 

straw. 409 

tidies. 339 


Lace—Continued. Paragraph, 

tinsel wire, lame or lahn.. 179 

trimmings. 339,390 

tuckings. 339 

veils and veilings. 339,390 

vitrages.\ . 339 

wearing apparel. 339,390 

willow. 409 

window curtains. 339,340 

woolen. 371 


Lacings, boot, shoe, and cor¬ 


sets . 320 

Lactarene. 504 

Lactic acid. 1 

Lahn . 170 

Lakes. 58 

Lambskins . 438 

Lame. 179 

Lampblack. . 47 

Land and water fowls. 494 

Lancewood . 198, 700 

Lanterns, magic, slides for.. 110 

Lappets, cotton. 313 

Lard. 277 

Lastblocks. 200 

Lastings, for buttons. 413 

Latch needles. 165 

Laths....*... 201 

Laudanum. 43 

Lava tips for gas burners... 98 

unmanufactured. 595 

Lavender, oil of. 626 


Lead: 

acetate of. 

articles of. 

bars. 

bullion. 

dross. 

glaziers’. 

litharge. 

manufactures of. 

nitrate of. 

not specially provided for. 

old refuse. 

ore. 

pencils. 

pigments. 

pigs. 

Pipe. 

red. 

scrap, old. 

sheets. 

shot. 

type metal. 

white. 

wire. 


60 

193 

182 

182 

182 

182 

60 

193 

60 

182 

182 

181 

456 

53 

182 

182 

51,54 

182 

182 

182 

190 

55 

182 





































































































102 


Leaf: Paragraph. 

aluminum. 175 

Du tell metal. 175 

gold. 177 

silver. 178 

tobacco. 213,214 

Leather: 

band. \438 

belting. 438 

bookbinders’ calfskins.... 438 

boots. 438 

calfskins. 438 

chamois skins.. 438 

cut into shoe uppers. 438 

dressed, upper and all 

other. 438 

enameled. 438 

goatskins. 438 

gloves. 439,445 

glove tranks. 446 

harness or parts of. 447 

hides of cattle. 437 

japanned. 438 

kangaroo skins. 438 

kid skins. 438 

lambskins. 438 

manufactures of.. 450 

morocco skins for. 438 

patent. 438 

pianoforte and pianoforte 

action. 438 

saddles and saddlery, or 

parts of. 447 

sheepskins. 438 

shoe laces. 438 

shoes. 438 

sole. 438 

vamps. 438 

varnished. 438 

Leaves: 

artificial. 425 

as drugs. 20,548 

Leeches. 596 

Lees: 

crystal. 6 

wine, crude. 6 

Leakage of wine, no allow¬ 
ance for. 296 

Lemonade. 300 

Lemon boxes. 205 

grass, oil of. 626 

juice. 597 

oil of. 626 

peel. 267 

Lemons. 266 

Lenses. 109, 111 


Paragraph. 


Lenses, discs for. 565 

projecting. Ill 

Letter copying books. 397 

Libraries of persons from 

foreign countries. 504 

Lichens, as drugs. 20 , 548 

Licorice and extracts of. 29 

in paste. 29 

rolls.. 29 

other forms. 29 

root, un ground. 598 

Lifeboats and life-saving ap¬ 
paratus . 599 , 

Lignum-vit*. 198,700 

Lilies. 251 

Lilies of the valley-- 251 

Lime. 90 

borate of. 11 

chloride of. 8 

citrate of. 600 

juice. 597 

sulphate of, artificial. 46 

Limes. 266 

oil of. 626 

Limestone. 117,118 

rock asphalt. 93 

Linen: 

collars. 338 

cuffs. 338 

manufactures of ( see Flax). 347 

Linings for bicycle tires. 320 

woolen. 368, 369 

Linoleum. 337 

Linseed. 254 

oil. 37 

Liqueurs. 292 

Liquors. 290 

coloring for. 18 

internal-revenue s t a m p s 

for.sec. 9 

Litharge. 60 

Lithographed plates. 166 

Lithographic: 

cigar labels,fiaps,and bands 400 

periodicals. 400 

prints. 400 

prints for institutions. 503 

illuminated, for chil¬ 
dren’s books. 400 

stones. 601 

Litmus. 602 

Live animals. 218-222 

Loadstones. 603 

Logs. 699 

Logwood, extracts of. 22 


































































































103 


Paragraph. 

London purple. 59 

Looking-glass plate. 105,10G 

Loom harness. 320 

Loops, iron or steel. 124 

Lottery tickets and advertise¬ 
ments, importation pro¬ 
hibited . sec. 1G, 18 

Lumber. 195 

produce ot* forests on St. 

Croix River.sec. 21 

produce of forests on St. 

John River. sec. 20 

Lupulin. 248 

Lye of wood ashes.. 485 

M. 

Macaroni.. 229 

Mace, oil of. ... 62G 

Machinery: 

imported for repair. sec. 19 

patterns for. GIG 

Mackerel. 261 

Madder. G04 

Indian. 604 

Magic lanterns, glass slides 

for. 110 

Magnesia: 

calcined. 31 

carbonate of. 31 

medicinal... 31 

Magnesia, sulphate of. 31 

Magnesite. 605 

Magnesium, unmanufactured 606 

Mahogany wood. 198, 700 

Maize or corn. 227 

Malacca joints, Indian. 700 

Malachite, manufactures of.. 115 

Malt, barley. 224 

extract. 298 

Manganese, ferro. 121 

ore. G07 

oxide. 607 

Manganiferous iron ore. 121 

Mangel-wurzel seed. 656 

Manicure knives. 153 

Manila cables and cordage.. 329 

unmanufactured o r 

undressed. 566 

Manna. 608 

Mantels, slate. 120 

Manufactured articles: 
component material of chief 

value. sec. 7 

convict labor, products of, 
prohibited. sec. 31 


Paragraph* 


Manufactured articles—Con. 


nonenumerated. 

sec. 6 

of the United States, ex¬ 


ported and returned_ 

483 

similitude clause. 

sec. 7 

Manufacturing, bonded ware- 


house. sec. 15 

Manures. 

569 

Manuscripts. 

609 

Maps. 

403 

for schools and institu¬ 


tions . 

503 

for use of the United 


States. 

500 

paper . 

403 

printed more than 


twenty years, free.. . 

501 

Maple sirup. 

210 

Maple sugar. 

210 

Marble: 


in block, rough or squared 


only. 

114 

manufactures of. 

115 

mosaic cubes. 

114 

paving tiles . 

114 

sawed or dressed. 

114 

slabs. 

114 

Marbles, toys. 

418 

Market value: 



additions to make. sec. 32 

ascertainment of. sec. 32 

Marine coral. 535 

Marking imported goods. .. sec. 8 

Marrow, crude. 610 

Marshmallow root, leaves, or 

dowers. 611 

Masks. 451 

Matches, friction or lucifer.. 423 

Materials for construction of 

vessels. sec. 12 

Mats: 

tiax or hemp. 334 

made of cocoa fiber or rat¬ 
tan . 452 

made of carpeting. 382 

Mattings, Chinese, Japanese, 

etc. 333 

floor, straw. 333 

Matting, made o? cocoa fiber 

or rattan. 452 

Mattresses, hair, curled, suit¬ 
able for... 430 

Meal: 

corn. 228 

oat. 231 










































































104 


Paragraph. 


Meal, rice. 232 

Measuring tapes, tapes for 

use in manufacture of .. 336 

Meat, extract of. 276 

Meats . 273-275 

Medals, of gold, silver, or 

copper. 612 

Medicinal drugs, vegetable 20,548 
or medicated soap 72 

preparations_67, 68 

Meerschaum, crude. 613 

Melada, sirup of. 209 

Men’s hats of fur. 432 

Mercurial preparations. 68 

Metal articles n. s. p. f. 193 

bodkins. 165 

bri tan nia. 637 

composition . 533 

Dutch, clippings from. 505 

Dutch, in leaf. 175 

manufactured articles 

and wares of. . 193 

sheets, enameled. 159 

threads, gold and sil¬ 
ver . 179 

type. 190 

umbrella and parasol 
ribs and stretchers. 170 

yellow. 176 

Metallic articles bestowed as 

trophies or prizes. 612 

hooks and eyes. 180 

mineral substances 
in a crude state.. 183 

penholders. 187 

pens, except gold .. 186 

pins. 188 

Metals, un wrought. 183 

Metronomes. 453 

Mica. 184 

Microscopes. Ill 

Milk: 

fresh. 238 

of India rubber. 579 

preserved or condensed or 

sterilized. 239 

sugar of. 239 

Mill saws. 168 

shafting. 135 

stones and burr stones.. 

116, 671 

Millinery ornaments, feath¬ 
ers, dowers, birds, etc. 425 

Mineral, metallic substances. 183 

7 » 


Paragraph. 


Mineral, orange. 50 

salts of natural min¬ 
eral waters. 615 

substances, articles 

composed of. 97 

waters. 301 

waters, bottles and 
jugs containing .. 301 

waters, artificial and 
imitations of nat¬ 
ural . 301 

wax. 695 

Minerals, crude. 614 

Mineralogy, specimens of... 666 

Mining explosives. 422 

Mirrors. 112 

Models of inventions. 616 

Mohair for buttons. 413 

Molasses. 209 

concentrated . 209 

concrete_^. 209 

sugar drainings or 

sweepings. 209 

Molded glassware and glass 

bottles. 99 

Molds: 

button. 414 

hammer. 135 

gold beaters. 567 

gun barrel. 135 

Monazite sand. 183 

Mouohydrate of soda. 75 

Monumental stone. 117,118 

Moquette carpets. 372 

Morocco, skins for. 438 

Morphia. 43 

sulphate. 43 

Morphine. 43 

sulphate of. 43 

Mosaic cubes of marble, onyx 

or stone. 114 

Moss. 617 

sea. 81 

Mosses as drugs. 20,548 

Mother-of-pearl, manufac¬ 
tures of. 450 

Mowers. 460 

Mufflers.312,388 

Mule shoes. . 163 

Mules. 220 

Mungo. 363 

Munjeet. 604 

Muriate of ammonia. 5 

Muriatic acid. 464 












































































105 



Paragraph. 

Netting: 

Paragraph. 

Mushrooms. 


241 

cotton. 

... 339 

Music. 


403 

flax, gill. 

... 332 

for institutious.... 


503 

silk. 

... 390 

printed more than 


wool. 

... 371 

twenty years .. 


501 

Newspapers. 

... 621 

raised print for 

the 


Nickel: 


blind. 


502 

alloy. 

... 185 

Musical instruments 

or 


pigs, ingots, bars, or sheets 185 

parts.. . 


453 

manufactures of. 

... 193 

Musk. 


018 

matte.•.... 

... 629 

Muskets. 


157 

ores of. 

... 629 

Mustard. 


287 

oxide. 

... 185 

seed. 


050 

Niter cake. 

.. . 80 

Mutton. 


274 

Nitrate of lead. 

.. . 00 

Muzzle-loading shotguns 

... 

157 

potash. 

. 65, 044 

Myrobolans.. 


G19 

soda or cubic 

ni- 

Myrtle sticks. 


700 

trate. 

... 605 



Nitric acid. 

... 404 

N. 



N itro-picric acid.\ 

... 464 



Nitro-benzol. 

... 524 

Nail rods. 


130 

Nitro-toluol. 

... 524 

Nails: 



Nitrous ether, spirits of.. 

... 21 

cut. 


160 

Noils, wool, or bair. 

... 302 

hob. 


101 

Nonenumerated articles. 

secs. C, 7 

horseshoe. 


101 

Nottingham bed sets.... 

... 340 

wire. 


162 

curtains .... 

... 340 

wrought iron or steel. 


161 

pillow shams 

... 340 

Naplitol. 


524 

Nursery stock. 

... 252 

Naplithalin. . 


524 

Nutgalls. 

. 20,548 

Naphtylamin . 


524 

Nutmegs. 

... 067 

Nan Iritis 


339 

Nuts: 


Natural history, specimens 

almonds. 

... 269 

of. 


060 

as drugs . 

. 20,548 

Neat cattle: 



Brazil. 

... 622 

importation prohibited 

.. sec. 25 

cocoanuts in the shell . 

... 022 

hides of.. 

.. sec. 25 

cream .. 

.. . 022 

Neck ruchings. 

. 339 

, 390 

filberts. 

.. 270 

ruffliugs. 

. 339,390 

iron. 

... 103 

ties. 


314 

n. s. p. f . 

... 272 

wear. 


314 

palm. 

... 022 

NppjIIp wirft 


137 

keruels. 

... 022 

Needles: 


peanuts . 

... 271 

crochet. 


105 

steel . 

... 103 

darning. 


020 

walnuts. 

.. 270 

hand sewing. 

knitting. 


020 

105 

Nut oil. 

Nux vomica. 

... 626 
... 623 

knitting machine. 


165 



latch. 


165 

O. 


sewing machine. 


105 


... 624 

tape . 


165 

Oakum. 

Neroli oil. 


026 

Oar blocks. 

... 200 

Nets: 



Oatmeal and oathulls ... 

... 231 

gill, flax. 


332 

Oats. 

.. 230 

wool. 


371 

Obscene articles. secs. 16-18 



























































































106 


Paragraph. 


Ocher. 49 

ground in oil. 49 

Oehery earths. 49 

Oil: 

almond. 62G 

amber. 626 

ambergris. 626 

American fisheries. 626 

aniline .. 626 

anise. 626 

anise seed. 626 

anthoss.... 626 

aspic. 626 

attar of roses. 626 

bean. 626 

bergamot. .... 626 

cajeput. 626 

cake. 625 

caraway. 626 

cassia. 626 

castor................... 33 

cedrat. 626 

chamomile. 626 

cinnamon. 626 

citronella. 626 

civet. 626 

cloth. 337 

cocoanut. 626 

cod-liver. 34 

colors. 58 

cotton-seed. 35 

creosote. 524 

croton. 36 

dead. 524 

distilled. 3 

enfleurage grease. 626 

essential or expressed_ 3 

fennel. 626 

fish. 42 

of American fisheries. 626 

flaxseed. 37 

fruit. 21 

fusel. 38 

liempseed . 39 

herring. 42 

ichthyol. 626 

jasmine or jasimine. 626 

juglandium. 626 

juniper. 626 

lavender. 626 

lemon. 626 

grass. 626 

lime. 626 

linseed. 37 

mace. 626 


Oil-Continued. Paragraph. 

neroli. 626 

nut. 626 

olive. 40 

olive, for manufacturing or 
mechanical purposes ... 626 

orange. 626 

flower. 626 

origanum. 626 

ottar of roses. 626 

palm. 626 

peppermint. 41 

petroleum.‘. 626 

poppy-seed. 37 

rape seed. 39 

rendered. 3 

rosemary. 626 

seal. 42 

sesame. 626 

sesamum seed.r. 626 

soluble or alizarine as¬ 
sistant . 32 

spermaceti. 626 

spike lavender. 626 

thyme. . 626 

used for dressing or stuf¬ 
fing leather, soap making 

or wire drawing. . 568 

valerian. 626 

vitriol. 1 

whale. 42 

of American fisheries 626 

Oils. 626 

Old brass. 505 

coins. 530 

Old copper. 533 

gunny bags and gunny 

cloths. . 632 

india rubber. 579 

junk. 588 

pewter and britannia... 637 

paper. 632 

refuse and scrap lead... 182 

types. 690 

zinc. 192 

Olive oil. 40 

for manufacturing or 
mechanical pur¬ 
poses . 62G 

Olives. 264 

Onions. 249 

Onyx: 

block, rough, or squared.. 114 

manufactures of. 115 

mosaic cubes. 114 

paving tiles. 114 



































































































107 


Onyx—Continued. Paragraph. 

sawed or dressed. 114 

slabs. 114 

Opal glassware. 100 

Opera glasses. Ill 

Opium: 

alkaloids or salts of. 43 

aqueous extracts of. 43 

containing less than 9 per 

cent, of morphia. . 43 

containing 9 per cent, and 

over of morphia. 43 

crude. 43 

for smoking...... t. 43 

liquid preparations of. 43 

other preparations of. 43 


regulations concerning 
stamping, etc. (see sec. 
38 to 40, act Oct. 1, 
1890). 

removal from bonded ware¬ 


houses . 43 

tincture of. 43 

Optical instruments. Ill 

discs for .. 565 

Orange juice, sour. 597 

mineral. 50 

oil. 626 

peel. 267,627 

stick. 700 

wood. 700 

Oranges. 266 

boxes and barrels 

containing. 205 

Orchids . 251 

Orchil or orchil liquid. 628 

Ore: 

antimony. 476 

chromic. 520 

cobalt. 525 

copper. 629 

emery. 550 

gold. 629 

iron. 121 

lead.- - 181 

manganese. 607 

manganiferous iron. 121 

nickel.-.. 629 

nickel matte. 629 

silver. 629 

sulphur. 674 

tin.% • 683 

Organ zin e silk. 385 

Oriental rugs. 379 

Origanum oil. 626 

Orleans and all extracts of.. 475 


Paragraph. 


Ornamental feathers. 425 

Ornaments, chinaware. 95 

millinery. 425 

Orpiment. 479 

Osier: 

hats of. 409 

manufactures of. 206 

prepared for basket-mak¬ 
ers’ use. 206 

sheets or squares for mak¬ 
ing hats. 409 

Osmium. 630 

Oxalic acid. 464 

Oxide: 

cobalt. 16 

manganese. 607 

nickel. 185 

strontia. 673 

tin, black. 683 

uranium. 691 

zinc. 57 

Ox shoes. 163 


P. 


Packers’ skewers of wood... 207 

Packages, m a rki n g and 

stamping. sec. 8 

of wine in bottles. 296 

Packing boxes and shooks .. 204 

Paddy. 232 

Painted glass windows. 112 

Painters’ knives. 155 

Paintings, not otherwise pro¬ 
vided for. 454 

for colleges. -702 

for exhibition.... 701 

for presentation.. 703 

oil. 454 

on glass. 703 

water color. 454 

Paints: 

artists’. 58 

baryta, sulphate of, or 

barytes. 44 

black bone, ivory or vege¬ 
table . 47 

blanc fixe. 46 

blue, Berlin, Prussian, or 

Chinese. 45 

all containing ferro- 
cyanide of iron.... 45 

ultramarine. 52 

wash, containing ul¬ 
tramarine . 52 



















































































108 


Paints—Continued. Paragraph, 

brown or gray acetate of 

lead. 00 

clirome green. 48 

yellow. 48 

chromium colors. 48 

cobalt. 525 

cochineal. 527 

colors containing quicksil¬ 
ver . 54 

crayons. 58 

frostings. 58 

in tubes. 58 

lakes. 58 

litharge. 60 

London purple. 59 

ocher and ochery earths .. 49 

orange mineral. 50 

or pigments containing zinc 57 

oxide of zinc. 57 

Paris green. 59 

pigments. 55,57, 58 

red lead. 51 

sienna and sienna earths.. 49 

smalts. 58 

umber and umber earths.. 49 

verdigris. 694 

vermilion. 54 

wash blue. 52 

white. 57 

white acetate of lead. 60 

Paris . 56 

pigment containing 

lead. 55 

satin... 46 

sulphate of zinc .... 57 

sulphide of zinc . .*.. 57 

whiting. 56 

yellow acetate of lead .... 60 

zinc, chloride of. 57 

oxide of... 57 

Palette knives. 155 

Palings. 202 

Palladium. 631 

Palm-leaf braids, etc. 409 

fans, common.... 552 

hats of. 409 

manufactures of.. 449 

unmanufactured . 552 

Palm nut kernels. 622 

Palm nuts. 622 

oils. 626 

Palms.<_ 251 

Pamphlets. 403,502 

Pants, cotton. 319 


Paper: Paragraph. 

albumenized. 398 

albums. 404 

all not specially provided 

for. 402 

bibulous. 397 

blank books. 400, 403 

bond. 401 

booklets. 400 

books. 400 

cigarette and covers. 459 

boxes. 405 

cards, playing. 406 

charts....:. 403 

cigarette. 459 

copying. 397 

books. 397 

crepe. 397 

drawing. 401 

engravings. 403 

envelopes. 399 

etchings. 403 

felt, roofing. 394 

filtering. 397 

for screens or fireboards.. 402 

handmade. 401 

hangings . .. 402 

Jacquard designs. 402 

ledger. 401 

letter. 401 

lithographic bands. 400 

books and 
booklets .. . 400 

cigar labels... 400 

fashion maga¬ 
zines . 400 

flaps. 400 

periodicals ... 400 

prints. 400 

maps. 403 

manufactures of. 407 

masks of. 451 

music. 403 

old. 632 

pamphlets. 403 

parchmeut. 398 

pencils. 456 

periodicals. 400 

photographic. 398 

photographs. 403 

playing cards. 406 

pottery. 397 

printed matter. 403 

printing. 396 

record. 401 

























































































109 


P aper—Con tinned. 

Paragraph. 

Pease: 

Paragraph. 

roofing felt. 

.... 394 

dried . 


250 

sensitized . 

.... 398 

green . 


250 

sheathing. 

.... 394 

in cartons or papers... 


250 

shoe buttons made of. 

.... 414 

prepared or preserved. 


241 

stamps. 

.... 670 

split. 


250 

stereotype. 

.... 397 

Peat moss. 


455 

stock.. *. 

.... 632 

Pebble, unwrought Brazilian 

507 

surface-coated. 

.... 398 

lensesof. 


309 

tablet. 

.... 401 

Peel: 



tissue. 

.... 397 

citron, preserved. 


267 

typewriting. 

.. .. 401 

lemon and orange. 

.267.627 

writing. 

.... 401 

Penalty for undervaluation. sec. 32 

Papier mache, manufactures 

Pencil leads. 


457 

of. 

.... 450 

Pencils: 



shoe buttons. 414 

hair... 


410 

Paraffin. 

.... 633 

lead. 


456 

Parasol sticks.. 

. 462,700 

paper . 


456 

ribs and stretchers.. 170 

slate. 


456 

Parasols. 

.... 462 

wood. 


456 

Parchment. 

. ... 634 

Penholder tips. 


187 

paper. 

.... 398 

Penholders and parts thereof 

187 

Parian ware. 

... 95,96 

Pen knives. 


153 

dials. 

.... 191 

Pens: 



works in_ 

.... 702 

gold. 


187 

Paris green. 

.... 59 

metallic. 


186 

white. 

.... 56 

Pepper: 



plaster of. 

.... 450 

black or white. 


667 

Partridge, sticks of. 

.... 700 

cayenne or red. 


287 

Paste: 


Pepper min t»oil. 


41 

alizarin assistant... r . 

.... 32 

Percentage of alcohol 

in 


Brazil. 

.... 506 

wines, etc. 


296 

diamonds. 

.... 435 

Percussion caps. 


424 

licorice. 

.... 29 

Perfumed soap. 


72 

manufactures of. 

.... 112 

Perfumery. 


70 

Pastels. 

.... 454 

Periodicals. 

400. 

, 621 

Pastes of indigo. 

.... 25 

Personal effects: 



toilet. 

70 

accompanying passenger.. 

697 

Patent alum. 

4 

of citizens of United States 


barley. 

.... 225 

dying in foreign coun- 


leather . 

.... 438 

tries. 


636 

tartar. 

6 

Petroleum... 


626 

Patterns for machinery. 

.... 616 

Pewter, old. 


637 

Paving tiles, marble.... 

.... 114 

manufactures of. 


193 

posts. 

.... 196 

Phenol. 


524 

Peaches . 

.... 262 

Philosophical apparatus 


Peanuts. 

.... 271 

brought by professional 


Pear seedlings. 

.... 252 

artists, lecturers, 
scientists. 

or 


Pears.- 

.... 262 


701 

Pearl buttons. 

.... 414 

Philosophical apparatus 

for 


hard pninsr 

91 

societies, etc. 


638 

mother of. 

. 450,635 

Phosphates.. 


639 

shells . 

.... 635 

Phosphoric acid. 


464 

Pearled barley. 

.... 225 

Phosphorus. 


61 

Pearls. 

. 434,436 

Photograph albums. 


404 
























































































110 


Paragraph 

Photographic dry plates and 


films. 458 

Photographic lenses. Ill 

Photographs. 403 

500, 501, 503, 701, 702 

Phthalic acid. 464 

Pianoforte action leather.... 438 

leather. 438 

actions and parts. 453 

Piano wire. 137 

Pickles.. 241 

Pickled fish. 261 

herrings. 260 

Pickets. 202 

Picric acid. 464 

Pig iron. 122 

Pigments. 55,57,58 

Pigs of wopper. 532 

iron. 122 

lead. 182 

tin. 683 

zinc. 192 

Pile fabrics. 315,342,386 

Pillow shams. 340 

Pimento: 

unground. 667 

wood. 700 

Pineapples...263,268 

Pine kindling wood. 197 

Pins: 

bonnet. 188 

hair. 188 

hat. 188 

metal. 188 

solid head. 188 

safety. 188 

shawl. 188 

Pipe bowls. 459 

Pipes. 147,152,182,453,459 

boiler. 152 

cast-iron. 147 

clay smoking. 459 

copper. 176 

lead. 182 

pitch.•. 453 

tobacco. 459 

Pistols...*. 158 

Pit saws . 168 

Pitch: 

Burgundy. 512 

of coal tar. 524 

of wood. 678 

pipes, pitch, metal. 453 

Plaits. 409 

Planking, ship. 699 


Paragraph. 

Planks. 195,198 

Plano or coquill glasses. 109 

Planters. 460 

Plants and vines. 252 

cuttings and seedlings 252 
for United States.... 640 
Plants, fruit, tropical and 

semi-tropical.... 560 
rose. 252 


Plaques . 95 

Plaster: 


rock or gypsum.. 91 

of paris, manufactures of.. 450 

Plasters, healing, curative, 

and court. 69 

Plate glass, cast, polished, 
looking-glass, or plate glass 
silvered and fluted,. 103, 


104,105,106,107 

Plates: 


boiler or other, of iron or 


steel. 126,131, 

132,133,134,135,140,141 

cast-iron stove. 148 

copper. 532 

copper rolled. 176 

electrotype. 166 

engraved or lithographed . 166 

glass, or discs. 565 

of iron or steel, coated with 

tin or lead. 134 

of metal enameled or glazed 159 

photographic, dry or films. 458 

railway fish.. 130 

saw. 135,141 

steel engraved. 166 

stereotype. 166 

tin and terne. 134,140 

Plateaux for hats, etc. 432 

Platina. 641 

Platinum. 642 

manufactures of. 193 

Playing cards. 406 

Plows. 460 

Plumbago. 643 

Plumbers 7 knives. 155 

Plums. 262,264 

Plum seedlings. 252 

Plush, hatters 7 . 461 

ribbons. 386 


Plushes: 


cotton . 315 

silk. 386 

Pocketknives. 153 

Poles, telegraph. 196 

























































































Ill 


Paragraph. 

Poles, hop. 699 

Pomades. 70 

Pomelos, or shaddocks... 205,266 

Pool balls. 417 

Poppy seed - . 254 

oil. 37 

Porcelain glassware. . 100 

dials. 191 

ware . .95,96 

Porcelain, works in, free_ 702 

Pork, fresh. 274 


Porous carbon pots. 98 

Porter. 297 

Portland cement. 89 

Posts of wood. 196, 200 

and columns, iron ... 125 

Potash: 

bichromate of. 62 

carbonate of... 644 

caustic. 63, 644 

chlorate of. 63 

chromate of. 62 

crude or black salts. 644 

hydriodate of. 64 

hydrate of, or caustic ’pot¬ 
ash . 644 

hydrate of, refined... 63 

iodateof. 64 

iodide of.. 64 

muriate of . 644 

nitrate of. 65,644 

prussiate of, red and yel¬ 
low . 66 

sulphate of. 644 

Potassa. 6 

Potassium, cyanide of. 66 

Potatoes. 253 

Pottery, works in. 702 

Pouches for tobacco. 459 

Poultry, live or dressed. 278 

Powder: 

bleaching. 8 

bronze .. % . 175 

curry. 541 

gun. 422 

Powders: 

for the hair, teeth, or skin. 70 

fulminating. 421 

ink. 26 

toilet. 70 

Precious stones. 435,545 

Precipitated chalk. 13 

Preparations: 

anatomical. 663 

chalk. 13 


Preparation s—Con Pd. Paragraph. 

coal tar. 15 

macaroni and vermicelli .. 229 

medicinal. 67,68 

of which distilled spirits are 

apart. 291 

opium. 43 

toilet. 2,70 

Printed matter. 403 

Printing paper. 396 

Prints, lithographic. 400,503 

Prizes or trophies. 612 

Products of coal tar. 15,524 

Professional books. 645 

implements.. . . 645 

instruments.... 645 

Projecting lenses. Ill 

Protoxide of strontian .. 673 

Prune juice or wine. 299 

Prunes. 264 

Prunelles. 264 

Pruning knives. 153 

Prussian blue. 45 

Prussiate of potash. 66 

Prussic acid. 464 

Public monuments, articles 

intended for. 702 

Pulp, blue. 45 

all manufactures of... 433 

masks. 451 

shoe buttons . . 414 

wood. 393,395,699 

ultramarine, blue. 52 

yellow chrome. 48 

Pulu. 646 

Pumice stone, manufactured 

and unmanufactured ... 92 

Purple, london.'- 59 

Putty.. 56 

Pyrites, dross or residuum 

from. 121 

Pyrites, sulphur ore. 674 

Pyroligneous acid. 1 

Pyroxylin, compounds of.... 17 

knife handles ... 155 

manufactures of. 17 
rolled or in sheets. 17 


Q. 


Quebracho, extracts of. 22 

Quicksilver. 189 

colors containing 54 

flasks or bottles . 189 

flasks or bottles 
returned. 483 



















































































112 



Paragraph. 


Paragraph. 

Quillings, cotton. 


339 

Reapers.. - 

.... 460 

Quilts of clown. 


425 

Reciprocal commercial 

ar - 

Quince stocks. 


252 

rangements. 

secs. 3, 4 

Quinces. 


262 

Reciprocity treaty with 

Ha- 

Quinia: 



waii. 

.... 209 

barks of. 


647 

Red chalk. 

.... 13 

sulphate and alkaloids of. 

647 

lead. 

.... 54 

Quoits. 


540 

pepper.. 

.... 287 




prussiate of potash 

.... 66 

R. 



vermilion. 

.... 54 




Reeds: 


Rabbits’ fur, hats composed 


chair. 

.... 206 

of. 


432 

unmanufactured. 

.... 700 

Rags. 

632 

,648 

Refined bauxite. 

4 

wool. 


363 

Regalia, free. 

.... 649 

Railroad ties. 


196 

Regulus, antimony. 

.... 173 

Rails: 



Regulus, copper. 

.... 534 

flat. 


130 

Reimportation of articles... 483, 

T.. 


130 


sec. 27 

Railway bars. 


130 

Rendered oils. 

3 

fish plates. 


130 

Rennets. 

.... 650 

tires. 

. - . 

171 

Repairs to American vess- 

wheels. 


171 

els. 

.. sec. 13 

splice bars. 


130 

machinery. 

.. sec. 19 

Raisins. 


264 

Repeal provisions. 

.. sec. 34 

Rakes, horse. 


460 

Residuum from burnt 

py- 

Ramie: 



rites. 

.... 121 

articles of, n. s. p. f_ 


346 

Resin gum, as drugs_ 

.. 20,548 

cords . 


330 

Resorcin. 

.... 524 

handkerchiefs. 


345 

Revolving jfistols. 

.... 158 

hydraulic hose. 


335 

Retorts: 


manufactures of. 


347 

gas. 

.... 9,8 

shirting cloth. 


346 

platinum. . . 

.... 642 

threads . 


330 

Revenue stamps . 

670 

twines. 


330 

Ribbons. 

. 320,386 

woven fabrics. 


346 

Ribs for parasols and 

um- 

yarns, single. 


331 

brellas.. 

.... 170 

Rape seed. 


656 

Rice: 


oil.. 


39 

broken. 

.... 232 

Rasps. 


156 

cleaned. 

.... 232 

Ratafia. 


292 

flour. 

.... 232 

Rattan. 


700 

hulled and not hulled. 

.... 232 

for hats, bonnets, 

or 


meal. 

.... 232 

hoods. 


409 

paddy. 

.... 232 

mats and matting 

. .. 

452 

uncleaned. 

.... 232 

unmanufactured . 


700 

Ricinoleic acid. 

.... 32 

Raw or unmanufactured 

ar- 


Rifles. 

. 157,158 

tides. 

.. sec. 6 

Ring waste. 

.... 361 

Raw skins. 


664 

Rivet rods. 

.... 136 

Razors and razor blades . 


153 

Rivets . 

.... 167 

Ready-made clothing: 



Rochelle salts. 

6 

cotton. 


314 

Rock asphalt,limestone. 

.... 93 

silk. 


390 

crystal, manufactures 

wool. 


370 

of. 

.... 115 




















































































113 


Paragraph. 


Rocoa, and extracts of. 475 

Rods: 

aluminum. 172 

. copper. 170 

iron. 130,141 

steel... 130,14 L 

Rolls, licorice.?. 29 

Roman cement. 89 

Roofing felt. 394 

slates. 120 

Root: 

arrow, not manufactured.. 478 

briar. 700 

chicory. 280 

dandelion. 283 

ginger. 007 

Roots: 

as drugs. . 20,548 

bulbous. 20,251,548 

hop, for cultivation. 570 

Rope ends. 032 

hide. 573 

waste. 032 

Roping, cotton. 302 

Rosemary, oil of. 020 

Rose plants. 252 

Rosewood. 198, 700 

Ros$s, attar or ottar of. 020 

Rotten stone..... 071 

Roving, cotton. 302 

waste wool.\ 301 

Ro.ucou and extracts of. 475 

Rough burr stones. 071 

Round iron or steel.123,124 

Ruchings and rufflings: 

flax or cotton. 339 

silk.*. 390 

Rugs: 

Anbusson. 379 

Axminster . 379 

Berlin. 379 

carpeting.. 382 

oriental. 379 

Rust, no allowance for. 138 

Rye flour . 233 

Rye. 233 

S. 

Saccharine. 211 

Sacks, jute. 343 

Sadirons . 148 

Saddles and saddlery. 447 

Safety pins. 188 

Safflower and extract of. 051 

5797—02-8 


Saffron and extract of.. 

Paragraph. 

.... 651 

cake. 


651 

Sago, crude. 


652 

Saint John’s bread or bean, 
seed. 

656 

Salacin. 


653 

Sal ammojiiac. 


5 

Salaratus. 


73 

Salep or Salop. 


651 

Salicylic acid. 


1 

Salmon . 


261 

Sal soda. 


77 

Salt: 

cake.. 


80 

for curing meats 
fish. 

and 

284 

in bags, sacks, barrel! 
other packages. 

s, or 

284 

in bulk. 


284 

Salted fish. 


261 

Salted herrings. 


260 

Salted mackerel, halibut or 
salmon. 

261 

Saltpeter: 

crude. 


644 

refined. 


65 

Salts: 

aniline. 


472 

black. 


644 

chemical. 


3 

epsom. 


31 

mineral . 


615 

of cinchona bark. 


647 

of opium. 


43 

rochelle.. 


6 

santonin .. 


71 

strychnia. 


83 

uranium. 


691 

Sand. 


671 

Sandstone. 

117, 

118 

Santonin. 


71 

Sard els, or sardellen .... 


258 

Sardines.. 


258 

Satin white. .. 


46 

wood. 

198,700 

Sauce, fish .... 


241 

Sauces, all n. s. p. f. 

Sausage, bologna.. 

* - . . 

241 

...! 

655 

Saw plates, steel. 

135, 

141 

Sawed boards, plank, deals, 
etc. 195, 

198 

Sawed cabinet woods... 


198 

Sawed lumber. 


195 

Saws..... 


168 


































































































114 


Paragraph. 

Saxony velvet carpets. 373 

Scenery, theatrical. 645 

Scientific apparatus for insti¬ 
tutions . 638 

Scissors, steel. 153 

Scoured wool. 354,355 

Scrap, albums. 404 

India rubber. 579 

iron. 122 

lead. . 182 

steel. 122 

Screens of carpeting. 382 

paper for. 402 

Screw wire rods. 136 

Screws, wood. 169 

Scroll iron. 128,132 

Sculpture, casts of. 649 

Sea moss. 81 

Seal oil. 42 

Seating, hair. 431 

Seaweeds. 617 

Sections of columns or posts, 

iron or steel. 125 

Seed, lac. 592 

Seedlings. 252 

Seeds: 

anise. 656 

aromatic, as drugs. 20, 548 

bean. 656 

beet. 656 

caraway. 656 

cardamom. 656 

castor, or castor beans.... 254 

cauliflower. 656 

coriander. 656 

cotton. 656 

cummin. 656 

fennel . 656 

fengreek. 656 

flax. 254 

flower. 656 

grass. 656 

hemp. 656 

hoar bound... 656 

imported by Department 
of Agriculture or United 
States Botanic Garden . 640 

linseed. 254 

mangel-wurzel. 656 

morbid growth. 20, 548 

mustard. 656 

not specially provided for. 254 

oil. 254 

poppy. 254 


Seeds—Continued. Paragraph. 

rape. 656 

sorghum . 656 

St. John’s bread. 656 

sugar-beet. 656 

sugar-cane. 656 

Seines, flax. 332 

Sensitized paper. 398 

Sesame, or sesamum seed oil. 626 

Sesquicarbonate of soda.... 75 

Sewing machine needles .... 165 

Sewing silk. 385 

Shafting, steel. 135 

Shale . 415 

Shapes, steel. 124,135 

Shawl pins. 188 

Shawls, woolen. 370 

Shavings for paper stock.... 632 

Shears. 153 

Sheathing, felt. 553 

paper. 394 

or yellow metal . 176 

Sheep. 221 

Sheep dip. 657 

Sheepskins. 438 

Sheets of aluminum. 372 

copper. 176 

iron or steel. 131, 

132,133,134* 135, 
140,141,159 

lead. 182 

metal, enameled or 

glazed. 159 

platina. 641 

zinc. 192 

Shellfish . 659 

Shell: 

buttons. 414 

manufactures of. 450 

Shells. 635 

cocoa or cacao. 528 

engraved, cut, or orna¬ 
mented .. . 450 

Shingle bolts. 699 

Shingles .. . 203 

Ship chronometers. 191 

planking. 699 

timber. 699 

Shirt collars and cuffs. 338 

Shirts, cotton. 319 

Shoddy. 362 

Shoe buttons. 414 

knives. . 155 

lacings. 320 

leather. ... 438 































































































115 


Shoes: Paragraph. 

horse, mule, or ox. 163 

leather. 438 

Shooks: 

of American manufao- 

ture. 205,483 

packing box. 204 

sugar box. 204 

Shot, lead. 182 

Shotgun barrels. 158, 658 

Shotguns. 157,158 

Shrimps. 659 

Shrubs. 252,640 

Side arms. 154 

Sienna. 49 

earths. 49 

Silicate, alkaline ... . 79 

of soda. 79 

Silk: 

all manufactures of not 
specially provided for... 391 

appliqued articles. 390 j 

ascertainment of weight.. 392 

bandings. 389 I 

beaded goods. 390 | 

beltings. 389 

bindings. 389 i 

bolting cloths. 498! 

bone casing. 389 

braces. 389 | 

braids. 390 

button forms. 413 I 

carded or combed. 384 

chenilles. 386 

chiffon. 390 

clothing, ready-made. 390 ! 

cocoons. 661 

cords. 389 

edgings. 390 

embroidered articles. 390 

floss. 385 

flouncings. 390 

fringes. 390 

galloons. 390 

garters. 389 

goods, ornamented with 

beads or spangles. 390 

gorings. 389 

handkerchiefs. 388 

hat bands. 389 

hatters’ plush. 461 

inser tings. 390 

Jacquard figured goods... 391 

knit goods. 390 

laces. 390 

manufactures of. 391 


Silk—Continued. Paragraph, 

manufactures of, and india 

rubber. 391 

mufflers. 388 

nettings or nets. 390 

organ zi ne. 385 

pile fabrics. 386 

plush ribbons. 386 

plushes . 386 

raw or reeled.' 660 

ready-made clothing. 390 

ribbons, plush or velvet... 386 

ruchings. 390 

rufflings. 390 

sewing. 385 

singles. 385 

sleeve linings. 311 

spun in skeins. 385 

stripes. 311 

suspenders. 389 

tamboured articles. 390 

tassels. 389 

thread. 385 

thrown. 385 

tram. 385 

trimmings. 390 

tubing. 389 

twist. 385 

veiling. 390 

velvet ribbons. 386 

velvets. 386 

waste. 661 

wear in g apparel. 390 

webbing and webs. 389 

worm’s eggs. 662 

woven fabrics not specially 

provided for. 387 

yarns. 385 

Silver: 

bullions. 179 

bullion. 511 

coins. 530 

German. 174 

leaf. 178 

manufactures of. 193 

medals. 612 

ores. 629 

sweepings. 629 

tinsel wire. 179 

Singles, silk. 385 

Sirups: 

of cane juice. 209 

maple . . 210 

Sisal grass: 

binding twine. 491 

grass cables, cordage. 329 






































































































116 


Paragraph. 

Sisal grass,unmanufactured. 566 

Size, gold. 53 

Skeletons. 663 

Skelp, iron or steel. 131 

Skewers . 207 

Skin, preparations for the... 70 

Skins: 

bird . 425 

bookbinders’ calf. 438 

cal f. 438 

chamois.,. 438 

fish. . 556 

for morocco. 438 

fur, carrot ted. 426 

not dressed. 562 

goat. 438 

goldbeaters’. 567 

kangaroo. 438 

kid . 438 

lamb . 438 

n. s. p. f. 664 

raw. 664 

shee]). 438 

wools on. 360 

Skirt bindings, bias. 315 

Slabs for tables, slate. 120 

Slack coal. 415 

Slag, basic. 121 

Slate: 

all manufactures not spe¬ 
cially provided for. 120 

chimney pieces. 120 

mantels. 120 

pencils. 456 

rooting. 120 

slabs for tables. 120 

Slates. 120 

Sledges, blacksmiths’. 144 

Sleeve linings . 311 

Slides, glass, for magic lan¬ 
terns. 110 

Sliver, cotton. 302 

Stubbing waste. 361 

Smalts. 58 

Smelting and refining ores 

and metals in bond. .. sec. 29 

Smokers’articles. 459 

Snuff and snuff flour. 216 

Soap: 

castile. 72 

toilet and all other. 72 

Soda: 

arseniate of. 78 

ash. 78 

bicarbonate of. 73 

bichromate of. 74 


Soda—Continued. Paragraph. 

borates of. 11 

caustic. 76 

carbonate of. 75 

chlorate of. 75 

chromate of. 74 

concentrated crystals. 75 

crystals. 77 

cubic nitrate. 665 

hydrate of. 76 

hyposulphite of. 76 

monohydrate of. 75 

nitrate of. 665 

nitrite of.,. 76 

sal. 77 

sesquicarbonate. 75 

silicate of. 79 

sulphide of. 76 

sulphate of. 80 

supercarbonate of. 73 

tartrate of. 6 

water. 300 

Sole leather. 438 

Sounds, fish. 23 

Spar, manufactures of. 115 

Sparkling wines. 295 

Spars, timber used for. 194 

Specimens of natural history, 
botany, mineral¬ 
ogy . 666 

or casts of sculp¬ 
ture. 649 

Spectacle frames. 108 

Spectacles. 108 

glass plates or 

disks for. 565 

Spermaceti oil. 626 

Spices: 

as drugs. 20,548 

capsicum. 287 

cassia, cassiavera, and 

buds. 667 

cinnamon and chips. 667 

cloves and clove stems ... 667 

ginger root. 667 

mace. 667 

mustard. 287 

not specially provided for. 287 

nutmegs. 667 

pepper, black or white.... 667 

red. 287 

pimento. 667 

sage.-. 287 

Spiegeleisen. 122 

Spikes: 

cut. 160 

wrought. 163 

































































































117 


Spirits l Paragraph. 

ascertainment of proof of. 290 

distilled from grain. 289 

distilled, compounds of... 291 

of nitrous etber. 21 

of turpentine. 088 

Spirituous beverages_ 289-29G 

Spirit varnishes. 53 

Splice-bars. 130 

Split pease. 250 

Sponges. 82 

manufactures of.... 82 

Spool thread, cotton. 303 

Sporting rifles. 157,158 

Sprats. 258 

Sprigs. 1G4 

Spun silk. 385 

Spunk. GG8 

Spurs and stilts used in the 
manufacture of earthen¬ 
ware . 6G9 [ 

Stained glass articles. 100 

windows. 112 


Stamping of imported goods. sec. 8 
Stamps: 

foreign postageor revenue. G70 


internal-revenue, for— 

cigars. sec. 10 

liquors. sec. 9 

Standard samples of wool... 352 

Starch. 285 

burned. 286 

Statuary. 454 

for colleges, etc.... G49 

Statuettes, chinaware. 95 

Stave bolts. 200 

Staves of wood. 202 

Stays, boiler. 152 

Steel or iron (see Iron or 


in all forms n. s. p. f. 135 

strip.... 135 

substitutes for. 137 

steel trousers buttons. 414 

Stems, artificial. .. 425 

as drugs. 20,548 

v Stereotype paper.. . 397 

plates. 1G6 

Sterilized milk. 239 

Stick, lac. 592 

Sticks: 

for umbrellas, parasols, and 

sunshades. 462, 700 

for whips, fishing rods, or 

walking canes. 700 

hair wood. 700 

myrtle wood. 700 


Sticks—Continued. Paragraph. 

orange wood. 700 

partridge wood. 700 

pimento wood. 700 

Still wines. 296 

Stock, glue. 572 

nursery or greenhouse 252 

paper. 632 

Stockings, hose, and half 

hose, cotton. 317, 318 

Stocks for shotguns. 158 

Stone: 

building.117,118 

burr. 116,671 

cliff. 671 

freestone. 117,118 

granite. 117,118 

lime. 117,118 

monumental. 117,118 

pumice. 92 

rotten. 671 

sand. 117,118 

tripoli . 671 

ware. 94,95,96 

Stones: 

curling. 540 

flint. 557 

grind. 119 

lithographic. 601 

load. 603 

mill.;. 116 

precious and imitations of.. 435 

whet. 574 

Stops, art educational. 481 

Storax, or styrax. 672 

Stove plates. . 148 

Straw. 255 

braids. 409 

flax.323 

hats, bonnets, and hoods 409 

manufactures of. 449 

matting for floors.333 

Stretcher frames for umbrellas 

and parasols. 170 

Strings for musical instru¬ 
ments . 453 

Strip steel. 128 

Strontia, mineral, carbonate of 673 

oxide of.673 

Strontian, protoxide of. 673 

Strontianite. 673 

| Structural shapes of iron or 

steel. 125 

Studs. 414 

Strychnia or strychnine. S3 

Styrax. 672 

Subacetate of copper. 694 






























































































118 


Paragraph. 


Substances, explosive. 422 

used for manure. 509 

vegetable. 617 

Substitutes for butter. 236 

cheese. 237 

coffee. 283 

steel. 135 

Sugar: 

beet, seed. 656 

box shooks. 204 

candy. 212 

cane. 210 


colored. 212 

confectionery. 212 

drainings. 209 

glucose. 210 

grape. 210 

maple. 210 

of milk. 239 

saccharine. 211 

sweepings... 209 

tank bottoms. 209 

tinctured. 212 

Sultid of zinc, white. 57 

Sulphate of alumina. 4 

ammonia. 5 

baryta or bary¬ 
tes . 44,46 

copper . 9 

iron. 19 

lime, artilicial.. 46 

magnesia. 31 

morphia. 43 

Sulphate of morphine. 43 

potash. 644 

quiida. 647 

soda. 80 

zinc. 57 

Sulphide of arsenic. 479 

zinc. . 58 

Sulphite of antimony, crude. 476 

Sulpho-ricinoleic acid. 32 

Sulphur: 

crude. 674 

lac or precipitated. 674 

not otherwise provided for 674 

ore .. 674 

refined. 84 

flowers of. 84 

sublimed. 84 

Sulphuret of iron. 674 

Sulphuric acid.1, 675 

Sulphuric ether. 21 

Sumac: 

e x tract of. 22 

ground . 85 


Paragraph. 


Sunn binding twine. 491 

cables, and cordage... 329 

unmanufactured. 566 

Sunshades. 462 

sticks for .... 462, 700 
Supercarbonate of soda .... 73 

Surface-coated papers .....*. 398 

Suspenders. 320,371 

Swagedsteel. 135 

Sweaters. 319 

Sweepings of silver or gold.. 629 

Sweetmeats. 263 

Swine. 219 

Sword-blades. 154 

Swords. 154 

T. 

T rails. 130 

Table covers. 316 

damask. 321 

knives and forks. 155 

Tables, slate slabs for. 120 

Tacks, cut. 164 

Taggers iron or steel. 134 

tin. 132,134 

Tailors’ chalk. 13 

irons. ... 148 

Tallow. 279 

Tamarinds. 676 

Tamboured articles.. 312,339,390 
Tampico fiber: 

binding twine. 491 

cables and cordage. 329 

unmanufactured. 566 

Tank bottoms. 209 

Tanned and dressed calfskins 438 

Tannic acid. 1 

Tannin. 1 

Tanning, articles used for... 482 

Tape needles. 165 

Tapes of cotton... 320 

flax. 336 

Tapestry brussels carpet.... 376 

velvet carpets. 375 

Tapioca. 677 

Tar: 

coal, crude. 524 

coal, dyes or colors... 15 

coal, pitch of. 524 

coal, products. 15 

of wood. 678 

Tartar, cream of. 6 

Tartar, crude. 6 

patent. 6 

Tartars. 6 

Tartaric acid. 1 






























































































119 


Paragraph. 


Tartrate of soda or potassa.. 0 

Tassels.. 371,389 

Tea.. 079 

plants. 679 

Teams of immigrants. 474 

Teasets, toy. 95 

Teazles. 256 

Teeth. 680 

Teeth, preparations for. 70 

Telegraph and trolley poles . 190 

Telescopes.!. Ill 

Terne plates. 132,134,140 

Terra alba. 681 

japonica. .,. 682 

Textile grasses. 566 

Theatrical properties. 645 

Thorite.. . 183 

Thread: 

cotton. . 302,303 

flax, hemp, or ramie. 330 

silk. 385 

waste. 362 

Threads of gold, silver, or 

other metals. 179 

Threshing machines. 460 

Thrown silk. 385 

Thyme, oil of. 626 

Tidies. 3 9 

Ties, cotton..'. 129 

railroad. 196 

Tights. 319 

Tiles, plain and ornamented. 88 

marble paving. 114 

onyx paving. 114 

Timber: 

hewn. 194 

sided.. 194 

squared. 194 

round, for spars, or in build¬ 
ing wharves. 194 

round, unmanufactured. .. 699 

Tin: 

bars, blocks, pigs, or grain 

or granulated. 683 

black oxide of. 683 

taggers. 134 

ore, cassiterite or black 

oxide. 683 

plate. 134,140 

plates. 132 

manufactures of. 140 

Tincture of opium. 43 

Tinsel wire. 179 

Tips, for penholders. 187 

lava, for burners. 98 

Tires. 117 


Paragraph. 


Tires, bicycle, linings for.... 320 

Tissue paper. 397 

Tobacco: 

cigars, cigarettes, and che¬ 
roots . 217 

tiller. 213,214 

Internal Revenue Stamps. sec. 10 

leaf. 213,214 

manufactured. 215 

n. s. p. f. 215 

pipes. 459 

snuff and snuff flour. 216 

stems. 684 

unmanufactured ......... 215 

wrapper.^.213,214 

Toilet articles. 70,697 

preparations. 2, 70 

soap. 72 

waters. 2 

Toluol. 524 

Tolui(]ine. 524 

Tolidin. 524 

Tonqua, tonquin, or tonka 

beans. ... 685 

Tools of trade of persons em¬ 
igrating to the United 

States. 645 

track . 144 

Tooth and disk harrows_ 460 

Toothpicks. 207 

Top waste. 361 

Tow: 

of flax. 326 

of hemp. 327 

Tournav velvet carpets. 373 

Toys .... 418 

chinaware. 95 

Trade-marks.sec. 11 

Track tools. 144 

Tram silk. 385 

Tranks, glove . 446 

Treble ingrain carpets. 377 

Trees, nursery stock. 252 

Trimmings: 

bead or beaded. 408 

silk. 390 

flax, cotton, or other vege¬ 
table fiber. 339 

wool . 37 L 

Tripoli. 671 

Trophies. 612 

Tropical and semitropical 

fruit plants . 560 

Trousers buttons. 414 

Trousers buckles. 412 

T T columns. 125 































































































120 


Tubes: Paragraph. 

boiler .. 152 

iron or steel. 152 

Tuckings, flax and cotton... 339 

Tulips. ... 251 

Tuning forks and hammers . 453 

Tuimeric. 686 

Turpentine, spirits of. 688 

Venice. 687 

Turtles... 689 

Twine. 330 

binding. 491 

Twist, silk. 385 

Type metal. 190 

Types: 

new. 190 

old . 7 . 690 

Typewriter paper. 40 L 

U. 

Ultramarine blue. 52 

Umber and umber earths_ 49 

Umbrella and parasol ribs 

and stretchers.. 170 

sticks, wood... 462, 700 

Umbrellas. 462 

Undervaluation of goods, pen¬ 
alty for. sec. 32 

Underwear. 319 

Unenumerated articles 

.. secs. 6 and 7 

Union suits. 319 

United States: 
articles the growth, pro¬ 
duce, and manufacture 

of.. 483 

books, engravings, etc., for 

the use of. 500 

products of fisheries of ... 626 

Unwashed wools. 355 

Unwrought clays or earth.. 93 

Upper leather. 438 

Uranium, oxide, and salts 

of. 691 

Utensils, philosophical and 

scientific. 638 

y. 

yaccine virus. 692 

Valerian, oil of. 626 

Valerianic acid. 464 

yalonia. 693 

Vamps. 438 

Vanillin. 86 


Paragraph. 

Varnished leather. 438 

Varnishes._ 53 

spirit. 53 

Vases: 

chinaware . 95 

platinum. . 642 

Veal. 274 

Vegetable black. 47 

fiber, all manufac¬ 
tures of. 311, 

315,317,318,319, 
320, 334, 347, 395 

fibers, crude. 566 

ivory. 584 

knives. 155 

substances, crude, 617 

substances, mat 
tings manufac¬ 
tured from. 333 

wax. 695 

Vegetables. 257 

as drugs. 20,548 

prepared or pre¬ 
served . 241 

Veilings and veils. 339,390 

Vellum. 634 

Velvet carpet. 373,375 

ribbon. 386 

Velveteens. 315 

Velvets. 315,386 

Veneers of wood. 198 

Venetian chain carpets. 377 

Venice turpentine. 687 

Verdigris. 694 

Vermicelli. 229 

Vermilion red. 54 

Vermuth. 296 < 

Vests, cotton. 319 

Vessels: 


American, engaged in for¬ 
eign trade, repairs to.. sec. 13 
built in the United States 

for foreign account_ sec. 12 

cast iron. 148 

of glass. 100 

of platinum. 642 

supplies for. sec. 14 

United States, importa¬ 
tions in.. sec. 23 

wrecked in waters of the 

United States. sec. 28 

Vials. 99 

Vinegar. 288 

Vines . . 252 

Vitrages. 339 











































































121 


Paragraph. 


Vitriol, blue . 9 

♦ oil of. 1 

Vitrified brick. 87 

tiles. 88 

Vulcanized india rubber, 

manufactures of. 450 


W. 


Wafers, unleavened. 690 

Wagons of immigrants. 474 

Walking canes, sticks for. 462, 700 

Walnuts.. 270 

Wares, iron or steel, enam¬ 
eled or glazed. 159 

Warehouses: 

bonded manufacturing. .. sec. 15 
for smelting and re¬ 
fining ores .... sec. 29 

manufacturing. sec. 15 

withdrawals from. sec. 33 

Warps, cotton. 302 

Wash, blue. 52 

Washed wools. 355 

Washers, iron or steel. 163 

Waste: 

bagging. 632 

cotton. 537 

fit only for paper stock . .. 632 

garnetted. 361 

jute. 632 

not specially provided 

for. 463 

ring and roving. 361 

rope. 632 

silk. 661 

stubbing. 361 

thread. 361 

top. 361 

wool •. 361, 362 

yarn. 362 

Watches are not enumer¬ 
ated. 

Watch cases. 191 

dials. 391 


enamel for. 564 

jewels. 191 

movements. 191 

wire. 137 

Water, cologne. 2 

fowls. 494 

mineral, natural or 

artificial. 301 

soda. 300 

toilet. ^ 

Waterproof cloth. 337 


\VaX: Paragraph. 

bees. 490 

manufactures of. 443 

mineral. 695 

vegetable.*. 695 

Wearing apparel. 314, 

339,370,390, 408, 697 


Webs, flax, cotton and wool. 320, 

332, 389 

Wedges, iron or steel. 144 

Weeds for dyeing purposes. 20, 548 

manufactures of. 449 

Weighing of goods with¬ 
drawn from warehouse sec. 23 

Whalebone. 698 

manufactures of. 449 

Whale oil. 42 

Wharves, timber used in 

building. 194 

Wheat. 234 

flour. 235 

Wheels: 

hubs lor. 200 

emery. 419 

for railway purposes. 171 

steel tired, for railway pur¬ 
poses. 171 

Whetstones. 574 

Whip gut. 517 

manufactured. 448 

Whips, wood cut into lengths 

for. 700 

White acetate of lead. 60 

lead. 55 

paintand piginentcon- 

taining lead. 55 

paris. 56 

Whiting. 56 

Wicking, cotton. 320 

Wild animals for exhibition. 474 

Willow, hats of. 409 

manufactures of- 206 

prepared for basket 

makers . 206 

sheets or squares for 

making hats. 409 

Wilton velvet carpets. 373 

Window glass: 

common. 101,103,107 

stained or painted. 107 

Windows, glass, stained or 

painted. 112 

W ine: 

champagne. 295 

coloring for.. 18 

ginger. 296 


















































































122 


Wine—Continued. Paragraph, j 

lees. 6 

prune. 299 

sparkling. 295 

still. 296 

Wire: 

articles manufactured from 137 

bonnet. 137 

card clothing from. 146 

clock. 137 

corset. 137 

crinoline. 137 

bat. 137 

iron or steel. 137 

lead. 182 

nails. 162 

needle. 137 

piano. 137 

platiua. 641 

rods . 136 

rope.. 137 

round iron or steel. 137 

strand .• 137 

tinsel. 179 

watch. 137 

Witherite. . 489 

Wcod: 

ashes. 485 

bamboo. 700 

barrels. 204,205 

bass. . 195 

blocks of various kinds. 200, 699 

bolts. 200,699 

box. 198,700 

boxes .. 204,205 

briar. 700 

cabinet. 198,700 

furniture. 208 

casks. 204 

cedar. 196,198,700 

chair cane. .... 206 

clapboards. 199 

cork, unmanufactured_ 536 

ebony. 198, 700 

fence posts. 200 

fire .. . 699 

foreign export duties. sec. 3 

granadilla. 198, 700 

hair. 700 

hogsheads. u... 204 

hubs. 200 

India malacca joints. 700 

kindling. 197 

lance. 198,700 

laths. 201 


lignum vitae. 198, 700 


Wood—Continued. Paragraph. 

logs. 699 

lumber. 195 

mahogany. 198,700 

manufactures of. 208 

myrtle. 700 

orange . 700 

osier prepared for basket- 

makers’use. 206 

manufactures of .... 206 

packing boxes. 204 

box shooks. 204 

palings. 202 

partridge. 700 

paving posts. 196 

pickets. 202 

pimento. 700 

pitch of. 678 

planking, ship. 699 

poles. 196,699 

posts, paving. 196 

pulp, bleached. 393 

chemical.... 393 

ground. 393 

railroad ties. 196 

rattan. 700 

reeds . 206 

unmanfactured .... 700 

rose. 198,700 

satin. 198, 700 

screws. 169 

shingles. 203 

skewers. 207 

staves. 202 

sticks for umbrellas, para¬ 
sols, etc. 462,700 

sugar-box sliooks. 204 

sycamore. 195 

tar of. 678 

timber. 194, 699 

toothpicks. 207 

unmanufactured. 198 

veneers of. . 198 

white. 195 

willow, prepared for basket 

makers’ use. 206 

manufactures of.. . 206 

Woods: 

- dye, extracts of. 22 

other than dyewoods. 22 

used expressly for dye 
ing.. 20,548 

Wool: 

advanced beyond the 
washed or scoured con¬ 
dition . 364 


































































































123 


Wool — Continued. Paragraph, 

classification of . 348, 


849,850,351 
class one . 349,354,855, 356,357 
two. 350,354,355, 356, 357 
three.351,353, 354,358,359 


definition of. 383 

extract.... 362 

flocks, inungo, and lags .. 363 

grease. 279 

manufactures of. 365-382 

ou the skin. 360 

scoured. 354,355 

skirted (excepted). 356 

standard samples of. 352 

uuwashed. 355 

washed. . 354,355 

waste. 361,362 

Woolen art squares. 382 

bandings.. 371 

barrel buttons. 371 

beltings. 371 

bindings.. 371 

blankets.. 367 

bookings ... . 380 

braces. 371 

braids. 371 

bunting. 369 

buttons. 371 

carpets. 372-382 

clothing,ready-made 370 

cloths. 366,368,369 

coat linings. 368,369 

cords, and cords and 

tassels. 371 

dress goods. 368,369 

druggets. 380 

edgings. 371 

embroideries. 371 


fabrics having india 
rubber as a 
.coinponen t 


material.. 371 

knit. 366 

felts. 370 

flannels. 367 

flocks. 363 

flouucings. 371 

fringes. 371 

galloons. 371 

garnetted waste.... 361 

gimps. 371 

gorings. 371 

grease. 279 

head nets. 371 

iusertiugs. 371 


Paragraph. 

Woolen Italian cloths... 368-369 
knitted articles of 
wearing apparel.. 370 


knit fabrics. 366 

laces. 371 

linings. 308-369 

manufactures of, or- 
namented with 
beads or spangles. 371 

mats.:. 382 

muugo. 363 

netting. 371 

nets. 371 

noils. 362 

rags. 363 

ready made clothing 370 

ring waste . 361 

roving waste. 361 

rugs. 382 

shawls. 370 

shoddy. 362 

stubbing waste. 361 

suspenders. 371 

tassels. 371 

thread waste. 362 

top waste. 361 

trimmings. 371 

wastes. 361,362 

wearing apparel.... 370 

webbings. 371 

yarn waste. 362 

yarns. 365 

Works of art. 701, 702, 703 

for exhibition. 701,702 

for presentation. 703 

Worm gut: 

manufactures of. 448 

unmanufactured. 517 

Worms, silk, eggs of. 662 

Wrapper tobacco. 213,214 

Wrecked or sunken vessels.sec. 28 
Wrought iron or steel. 122,162,163 

X. 

Xylidin. 524 

Xyol. 524 

Y. 

Yams. 704 

Yarns: 

coir. 531 

cotton, carded. 302 

flax. 331 

hemp. 331 





















































































124 


Yarns—Continued. Paragraph. 

jute. 328 

ramie. 331 

silk. 385 

waste, woolen. 362 

woolen. 365 

Yellow chrome. 48 

metal. 176 

prussiate of potash.. 66 

Yolks of eggs. 245 

Z. 

Zaffer. 705 

Zaute currants. 264 


ARTICLES SPECIFIED IN RE 
4 OF TARIFF ACT 


Argols.sec. 3 

Beans, tonquin, tonqua, or 

tonka.sec. 3 

Beans, vanilla.sec. 3 

Brandies.sec. 3 

Champagne.sec. 3 

Coffee.sec. 3 

Crude tartar.sec. 3 

Cuts, vanilla beans.sec. 3 

Distilled spirits.sec. 3 

Drawings, pen and ink.sec. 3 

Lees, wine, crude.sec. 3 

Oil paintings.sec. 3 

Paintings . . sec. 3 

Pastels..sec. 3 

Pen and ink drawings.sec. 3 


Zinc: Paragraph. 

articles or wares of, not 
specially provided for.. 193 

blocks or pigs of. 192 

chloride of. 57 

dry. 57 

ground in oil. 57 

old and worn-out. 192 

oxide of. 57 

sheets of .. . 192 

sullid of. 57 

sulphate of. 57 

white paint or pigment con¬ 
taining . 57 

white sulphide of_ .... 57 


31 PROCITY SECTIONS 3 AND 
OF JULY 24, 1897. 


Sparkling wines.sec. 3 

Spirits manufactured or dis¬ 
tilled from grain. sec. 3 

Statuary....sec. 3 

Still wines.sec. 3 

Tartar, crude.sec. 3 

Tea.sec. 3 

Tonquin, tonqua, or tonka 

beans.sec. 3 

Vanilla beans.sec. 3 

Vermuth.sec. 3 

Wine lees, crude.sec. 3 

Water color painting.sec. 3 

Wines, sparkling.sec. 3 

Wines, still. sec. 3 


kB Ja ’09 














































































































































































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